4.7 Article

Autophagy blockade potentiates cancer-associated immunosuppression through programmed death ligand-1 upregulation in bladder cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 237, Issue 9, Pages 3587-3597

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcp.30817

Keywords

autophagy; bladder cancer; Hsa-miR-34a; immunosuppression; PD-L1

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan
  2. Shin Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital

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The study found that autophagy inhibitors can regulate cancer-associated immunosuppression in bladder cancer cells by influencing the expression of miR-34a and PD-L1. Consequently, the combined use of autophagy inhibitors and PD-L1 immune checkpoint blockade may serve as a potential therapeutic approach for treating bladder cancer.
A high basal level of autophagic flux in bladder cancer (BC) cells prevents cell death and weakens chemotherapy efficacy. However, how autophagy influences cancer-associated immunosuppression in BC remains undetermined. In this study, we observed a negative correlation between the autophagy-related markers LC3-II and programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) in BC cells. The autophagy inhibitors chloroquine (CQ) and bafilomycin A1 (Baf-A1) increased PD-L1 expression in BC cells through the ERK-JNK-c-Jun signal-transduction pathway. Moreover, the treatment of BC cells with CQ and Baf-A1 inhibited hsa-microRNA-34a (miR-34a) expression and miR-34a overexpression in BC cells prevented the autophagy blockade-induced PD-L1 expression; a negative correlation between miR-34a and PD-L1 expression was observed during treatment with autophagy inhibitors. Furthermore, miR-34a overexpression induced the cytotoxic activity of natural killer cells against BC cells. Our results provide evidence that autophagy blockade and its regulatory pathway affect cancer-associated immunosuppression through PD-L1 elevation. Thus, the coadministration of autophagy inhibitors and a PD-L1 immune checkpoint blockade provides a potential therapeutic approach for treating BC.

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