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The circadian clock gene ARNTL overexpression suppresses oral cancer progression by inducing apoptosis via activating autophagy

Authors :
Hanxue Li
Meng Li
Kuichi Chen
Yueheng Li
Zhengyan Yang
Zhi Zhou
Source :
Medical Oncology. 39
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Objective The study aimed to explore tumor suppressor mechanism of ARNTL from the perspective of autophagy in oral cancer Methods Human oral squamous carcinoma HN6 cells stably overexpressing ARNTL were established, cell viability and apoptosis were detected by CCK-8 and TUNEL assays, and intracellular autophagosomes were observed under electron microscopy. Western Blot detected expressions of Beclin1, LC3 II/I, ATG-12, P62, BAX and BCL-2. Bafilomycin A1 was used to detect autophagic flux, and Western Blot was used to detect changes of LC3II and P62 proteins. Autophinib was added to cells with ARNTL overexpression for recovery experiments, and cell proliferation and apoptosis were detected by flow cytometry. In vivo tumorigenesis experiment was used to evaluate the in vivo anti-tumor efficacy of ARNTL, and Western blot simultaneously detected ARNTL, LC3 II/I, Beclin1, P62 and ATG-12 expressions. Results ARNTL overexpression promoted apoptosis and autophagy and inhibited cell viability. In ARNTL-overexpressing cells, expressions of Beclin1, LC3 II/I, and BAX were significantly up-regulated, while P62 and BCL-2 expressions were decreased, and ATG-12 expression wasn't significantly changed. When the autophagy inhibitor Autophinib was used, expressions of elevated BAX and decreased BCL-2 were reversed effectively, as were decreased cell proliferation index and increased apoptosis index. An in vivo tumorigenesis assay also showed ARNTL overexpression inhibited tumor growth, and autophagy-related protein expressions were consistent with the in vitro data. Conclusions The research demonstrated for the first time that ARNTL induced apoptosis and inhibit cell proliferation dependent on autophagy in oral cancer, which provides theoretical basis for potential therapeutic targets.

Details

ISSN :
1559131X
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e58528bb98147de90db9dc76b6231a10