1. Aspirin enhances radio/chemo-therapy sensitivity in C. elegans by inducing germ cell apoptosis and suppresses RAS overactivated tumorigenesis via mtROS-mediated DNA damage and MAPK pathway.
- Author
-
Li X, Xu F, Wang R, Shen L, Luo B, Zhou S, Zhang J, Zhang Z, Cao Z, Zhan K, Zhao Y, and Zhao G
- Subjects
- Animals, Carcinogenesis drug effects, Carcinogenesis radiation effects, Carcinogenesis genetics, Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins metabolism, Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins genetics, ras Proteins metabolism, ras Proteins genetics, Chemoradiotherapy methods, Radiation Tolerance drug effects, Aspirin pharmacology, Caenorhabditis elegans metabolism, Caenorhabditis elegans drug effects, Apoptosis drug effects, Apoptosis radiation effects, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, DNA Damage drug effects, Germ Cells drug effects, Germ Cells metabolism, Germ Cells radiation effects, MAP Kinase Signaling System drug effects, MAP Kinase Signaling System radiation effects
- Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that combination therapy involving radiotherapy and aspirin decreases the survival rate of cancer cells. However, the mechanism by which aspirin exerts its radiation sensitization effect at the in vivo level remains largely unclear. In this study, we employed Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) as a model organism to investigate the effect of aspirin combined with radio/chemo-therapy on tumors at the individual level. Here, we illustrate that high-dose aspirin increases the expression of genes involved in core apoptosis pathways (egl-1, ced-9, ced-4 and ced-3) and induces germ cell apoptosis in C. elegans through mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP) and elevation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels. Crucially, aspirin-induces ROS upregulates the expression of genes critical for DNA damage response (hus-1, clk-2 and cep-1) and genes involved in MAPK pathways (lin-45, mek-2, mpk-1, sek-1 and pmk-1), thereby mediating the enhanced sensitivity of radio/chemo-therapy by aspirin. Notably, aspirin fails to induce germ cell apoptosis and enhance radio/chemo-therapy in C. elegans lacking the expression of each of those genes. Furthermore, in a C. elegans tumor-like symptom model, aspirin enhances radio/chemo-therapy sensitivity through ROS induction. However, low-dose aspirin can diminish the apoptotic signal of reproductive cells in C. elegans and exert anti-inflammatory effects. Our research results suggest that the tumor-suppressive and radio/chemo-therapy sensitizing effects of aspirin provide robust experimental evidence for improving the clinical efficacy of tumor radio/chemo-therapy and deepening our understanding of aspirin's mechanism of action in cancer., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF