4.7 Article

Chemical and genetic inhibition of STAT3 sensitizes hepatocellular carcinoma cells to sorafenib induced cell death

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages 577-585

Publisher

IVYSPRING INT PUBL
DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.22220

Keywords

STAT3; HCC; Sorafenib; Cell death

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province [2015J01293]
  2. Educational Scientific Research Project of Young Teachers in Fujian Province [JA14410]
  3. Science and Technology Planning Project of Fujian Province [2014Y2008]
  4. Natural Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scientist of Fujian Province [2015J06017]
  5. Joint Science and Technology Innovation Fund Project of Fujian Province [2016Y9043]
  6. Young and Middle-aged Key Personnel Training Program from Fujian Provincial Health and Family Planning Commission [2017-ZQN-58]
  7. Fujian Environmental Protection Science and Technology Project [2016R015]
  8. Collaborative Innovation Center for Stem Cells Translational Medicine (Fujian 2011 Program)

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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has become the second leading cause of cancer related death, with an increasing death rate in recent years. For advanced HCC, sorafenib is the first-line FDA approved drug, with no more than 3 months' overall survival advantage. Recently, a novel strategy has been proposed to improve sorafenib efficacy through enhancing the ability of sorafenib to induce cell death. STAT3 plays a key role in cancer development and recurrence by promoting cell proliferation, survival and immune evasion through its well-established function as a transcription factor in cancer. Notably, STAT3 transcription activity, indicated by its phosphorylation on Y705 is heterogeneous in different liver cancer cell lines. And sorafenib attenuates STAT3 phosphorylation on Y705. However, the role of STAT3 in sorafenib induced cell death is still largely unknown. Here, we show that liver cancer cells also exhibit heterogeneous sensitivities to sorafenib induced cell death, which co-relates with the STAT3-Y705 phosphorylation levels and JAK1/2 expression levels in Hep3B, Huh7 and HepG2 cells. Furthermore, overexpression or knockdown of STAT3 could switch HCC cells between resistant and sensitive to sorafenib induced cell death, which could be partially due to its regulation on Mcl-1, an anti-apoptotic protein. Finally, both inhibitors of STAT3 SH2 domain (S3i-201) or STAT3 upstream kinases JAKs (JAK inhibitor I) could synergistically enhance sorafenib induced cell death. Taken together, these data strongly suggest that STAT3 is not only a downstream effector of sorafenib, but also a key regulator of cellular sensitivity to sorafenib induced cell death, which provide support for the notion to develop STAT3-targeting drugs to improve clinical efficacy of sorafenib in liver cancer.

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