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EGFRvIII Promotes Cell Survival during Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress through a Reticulocalbin 1-Dependent Mechanism

Authors :
Hong P. T. Nguyen
Ahmad Zulkifli
Zammam Areeb
Sarah F. Stuart
Jordan Jones
Lucia Paradiso
Andrew H. Kaye
Vijay Rajagopal
Sonakshi Madan
Hui K Gan
Magdalene K. Montgomery
Juliana Gomez
Andrew P. Morokoff
Andrew M. Scott
Rodney B. Luwor
Source :
Cancers, Volume 13, Issue 6, Cancers, Vol 13, Iss 1198, p 1198 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2021.

Abstract

Simple Summary A key molecule, EGFRvIII has been shown to provide several growth advantages for brain tumors. However, we have found a new mechanism in which the EGFRvIII provides increased survival to brain cancer cells when under sub-optimal conditions. Specifically, we have found that the EGFRvIII drives the expression of a molecule called Reticulocalbin 1 (RCN1) and that RCN1 blocks cell stress and cell death, thereby allowing cells to survive and proliferate. Importantly, these findings will allow for the generation of drugs that block the function of EGFRvIII and RCN1 with the hope that these drugs will induce brain cancer cell death. Abstract Reticulocalbin 1 (RCN1) is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-residing protein, involved in promoting cell survival during pathophysiological conditions that lead to ER stress. However, the key upstream receptor tyrosine kinase that regulates RCN1 expression and its potential role in cell survival in the glioblastoma setting have not been determined. Here, we demonstrate that RCN1 expression significantly correlates with poor glioblastoma patient survival. We also demonstrate that glioblastoma cells with expression of EGFRvIII receptor also have high RCN1 expression. Over-expression of wildtype EGFR also correlated with high RCN1 expression, suggesting that EGFR and EGFRvIII regulate RCN1 expression. Importantly, cells that expressed EGFRvIII and subsequently showed high RCN1 expression displayed greater cell viability under ER stress compared to EGFRvIII negative glioblastoma cells. Consistently, we also demonstrated that RCN1 knockdown reduced cell viability and exogenous introduction of RCN1 enhanced cell viability following induction of ER stress. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that the EGFRvIII-RCN1-driven increase in cell survival is due to the inactivation of the ER stress markers ATF4 and ATF6, maintained expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 and reduced activity of caspase 3/7. Our current findings identify that EGFRvIII regulates RCN1 expression and that this novel association promotes cell survival in glioblastoma cells during ER stress.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd7106fc268d9e2a7f3877d54a01b9e0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13061198