4.6 Article

Identification and Validation of Afatinib Potential Drug Resistance Gene BIRC5 in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.763035

Keywords

bioinformatic analysis; NSCLC; afatinib resistance; BIRC5; TKI

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This study identified that overexpression of BIRC5 is associated with resistance to afatinib in NSCLC, and BIRC5-specific inhibitors may reverse the resistant phenotype. These findings suggest that dysregulation of the apoptotic cell death pathway may be a key mechanism in the development of TKI resistance in NSCLC.
IntroductionResistance to second-generation epidermal growth factor receptor-tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI), afatinib, is the most significant challenge in the clinical management of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. MethodsGenomic signatures that may confer afatinib resistance in NSCLC were identified via data mining of public databases and integrative bioinformatic analyses. Furthermore, acquired afatinib-resistant lung adenocarcinoma cell lines (HCC827 AR) were established by long-term exposure under afatinib in vitro for stepwise escalation. The expression of baculovirus IAP repeat protein 5 (BIRC5) was detected by western blot, and cellular viability of HCC827 AR was determined by CCK8. ResultsThrough integrative bioinformatic analyses of public datasets, overexpression of baculovirus IAP repeat protein 5 (BIRC5) was identified in both afatinib-resistant NSCLC cells and tissues, and BIRC5 overexpression was positively correlated with lymph node metastasis as well as pathological stage in NSCLC. Furthermore, NSCLC patients with BIRC5 overexpression showed poor survival outcomes. Immune infiltration analysis suggested that BIRC5 expression was significantly inversely correlated with tumor-infiltrating cell numbers and immune biomarker expression in NSCLC. The functions of genes co-expressed with BIRC5 were mainly enriched in cell cycle mitotic phase transition, double-strand break repair, and negative regulation of the cell cycle process signaling pathway. In addition, overexpression of BIRC5 protein was detected in afatinib-resistant cells by western blot, while BIRC5-expressing cells treated with BIRC5 inhibitor, YM155, were sensitive to afatinib. ConclusionsIn this study, we showed that overexpression of BIRC5 resulted in resistance to afatinib in NSCLC and BIRC5-specific inhibitors may overcome the resistant phenotype, indicating that dysregulation of the apoptotic cell death pathway may be the key mechanism underlying TKI resistance in the development of NSCLC.

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