The miR-221-5p/RAD18/RAD51 Axis Regulates DNA Damage Tolerance and Homologous Recombination to Drive Platinum Resistance in Ovarian Cancer

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Abstract

Platinum resistance remains a major barrier in Ovarian cancer (OC) treatment[1]. While hyperactivation of DNA damage response (DDR) is a hallmark of chemoresistance[2], the underlying epigenetic mechanisms driving this adaptation remain poorly understood. Here, we identify a novel post-transcriptional regulatory axis involving miR-221-5p that governs two critical DDR effectors: RAD18, which mediates DNA damage tolerance through trans-lesion synthesis (TLS)[3][4], and RAD51, the central recombinase for homologous recombination (HR)[5][6]. Although the miR-221/222 cluster is traditionally categorized as oncogenic[7][8], we demonstrate that the miR-221-5p arm functions as a potent tumor suppressor in OC. Bioinformatic and luciferase reporter assays confirmed that miR-221-5p directly targets the 3′UTRs of both RAD18 and RAD51 . In OC clinical specimens and cell lines, miR-221-5p downregulation inversely correlates with RAD18/RAD51 expression. Functionally, miR-221-5p restoration suppressed platinum-induced PCNA mono-ubiquitination and HR, inducing a “functional BRCAness” that sensitized both established and patient-derived primary OC cells to carboplatin and PARP inhibition. Furthermore, in vivo disseminated xenograft models demonstrated that stable miR-221-5p expression significantly reduced tumor burden. Collectively, our results delineate a novel regulatory mechanism where loss of miR-221-5p drives chemoresistance by derepressing the RAD18/RAD51 axis, identifying this axis as a promising therapeutic target.

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