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Upregulation of secreted phosphoprotein 1 affects malignant progression, prognosis, and resistance to cetuximab via the KRAS/MEK pathway in head and neck cancer

Kai Liu, Huiying Hu, Huanyu Jiang, Chenglei Liu, Haidong Zhang, Shanchun Gong, Dongmin Wei, Zhenkun Yu

2020Molecular Carcinogenesis28 citationsDOI

Abstract

Acquired resistance is a barrier to cetuximab efficacy in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Secreted phosphoprotein 1 (SPP1) is involved in various biological processes, including immune responses, cancer progression, and prognosis in many cancers, while little is known in HNSCC. Bioinformatics methods were used to identify candidate genes and further in vivo and in vitro experiments were performed to examine and validate the function of SPP1. We found that SPP1 was upregulated and has been found to have an oncogenic role in HNSCC. We further confirmed that overexpression of SPP1 affected proliferation, migration, invasion, and survival, and inhibited apoptosis, whereas silencing of SPP1 yielded opposite results to those of SPP1 overexpression. In addition, activation of the KRAS/MEK pathway contributed to the SPP1-induced malignant progression of HNSCC and resistance to cetuximab. Furthermore, SPP1 knockdown or an MEK inhibitor overcame this cetuximab-resistance pattern. Taken together, our findings for the first time identify the role of SPP1 in tumor promotion, prognostic prediction, and potential therapeutic targeting, as well as resistance to cetuximab in HNSCC.

Topics & Concepts

CetuximabHead and neck squamous-cell carcinomaKRASCancer researchDownregulation and upregulationBiologyGene knockdownGene silencingTumor progressionCancerMEK inhibitorMAPK/ERK pathwayHead and neck cancerColorectal cancerApoptosisSignal transductionGeneticsBiochemistryGeneBone and Dental Protein StudiesPancreatic and Hepatic Oncology Research
Upregulation of secreted phosphoprotein 1 affects malignant progression, prognosis, and resistance to cetuximab via the KRAS/MEK pathway in head and neck cancer | Litcius