Suppression of Glucosylceramide Synthase Reverses Drug Resistance in Cancer Cells Harbor Homozygous p53 Mutants
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Glucosylceramide synthase (GCS) catalyzes ceramide glycosylation in response to cell stress that produces glucosylceramide and other glycosphingolipids. GCS overexpression is a cause of drug resistance and enriches cancer stem cells (CSCs) during cancer chemotherapy. Previous studies showed that GCS modulates expression of p53 mutants and oncogenic gain-of-function (GOF) in heterozygous knock-in cell models ( TP53 R273H -/+ ). However, it is unclear whether GCS can modulate the effects of homozygous p53 mutations, which are common in many cancer cases. We report herewith that inhibition of GCS, via UGCG-knockout and using new inhibitor (Genz-161), effectively re-sensitizes drug resistance and diminishes CSCs in colon cancer cells carrying the homozygous p53 R273H mutation. In aggressive WiDr cells carrying TP53 R273H mutation, knockout of UGCG gene using CRISPR/Cas9 editing or inhibition of GCS with Genz-161 sensitized cancer cells to oxaliplatin, irinotecan and paclitaxel. With decreased ceramide glycosylation in lipidomic profiling, both UGCG-knockout and Genz-161 treatments substantially decreased wound healing, and diminished CSCs and tumor growth under chemotherapy. Interestingly, inhibition of RNA m 6 A methylation by neplanocin A reactivated p53 function and reversed drug resistance. Mechanistic investigation revealed that GCS inhibition downregulated METTL3 expression and repressed RNA-m 6 A modification on mutant p53 R273H effects. Altogether, our findings demonstrate that ceramide glycosylation promotes METTL3 expression and RNA m 6 A methylation in response to drug-induced stress, thereby promoting mutant p53 expression and associated GOF. Conversely, inhibition of GCS can diminish CSCs and drug resistance via reduction of m 6 A modification and reactivation of p53 function. GCS inhibition is an achievable approach for mutant cancer treatment.