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Secukinumab plays a synergistic role with starvation therapy in promoting autophagic cell death of hepatocellular carcinoma via inhibiting IL-17A-increased BCL2 level.

Authors :
Tang, Rong
Zheng, Linmei
Zheng, Jinfang
Wu, Jincai
Chen, Pingping
Chen, Jiacheng
Xu, Dafeng
Zeng, Yongchao
Li, Qijin
Zhang, Zhensheng
Source :
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology Animal; May2023, Vol. 59 Issue 5, p381-393, 13p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

It is known that IL-17A inhibits autophagy of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells, thus contributing to the carcinogenesis of HCC. Starvation therapy can promote the autophagic death of HCC cells by blocking the nutrition supply. The purpose of this study was to explore whether the pharmacological antagonist of IL-17A, secukinumab, and starvation therapy have a synergistic effect on the autophagic cell death of HCC. Here, it could be observed that compared with serum-free condition, the combination of secukinumab and serum-free status better promoted autophagy (observed by LC3 conversion rate, p62 protein expression and the formation of autophagosomes), and more significantly inhibited the survival and function (observed by Trypan blue staining, CCK-8, Transwell, and scratch assays) in HCC HepG2 cells. Moreover, secukinumab significantly decreased BCL2 protein expression under serum-normal and serum-free conditions. However, both the addition of recombinant IL-17A and overexpression of BCL2 blocked the regulation of secukinumab on the survival and autophagy in HepG2 cells. Nude mice experiments demonstrated that compared to the lenvatinib-alone group, the combination group of lenvatinib and secukinumab better inhibited the in vivo tumorigenesis of HepG2 cells and enhanced autophagy in xenotumor tissues. Furthermore, secukinumab significantly decreased BCL2 protein expression in xenotumor tissues without or with lenvatinib application. In conclusion, the antagonism of IL-17A with secukinumab, due to the upregulation on BCL2-related autophagic cell death, can cooperate with starvation therapy in inhibiting HCC carcinogenesis. Our data suggested that secukinumab can become an effective adjuvant for the treatment of HCC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10712690
Volume :
59
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology Animal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164720086
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11626-023-00770-6