Pharmacological inhibition of deubiquitinase UCH-L1 by LDN57444 sensitises hepatocellular carcinoma to sorafenib by reverting drug-induced adaptive responses

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Abstract

Background and aims

Therapeutic outcomes for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma remain inadequate, despite recent advances using immunotherapy. Long-term effectiveness of systemic therapies, including second-line multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor sorafenib, is limited by resistance mechanisms and adverse effects. Upregulated deubiquitinase UCH-L1 is frequently correlated with poor prognosis in cancers. Here, we investigated the therapeutic potential of combining pharmacological UCH-L1-inhibition with sorafenib in HCC.

Methods

UCH-L1 expression was analysed in TCGA-LIHC data and patient-derived HCC tissues. Sorafenib and LDN57444 effects were evaluated in vitro in cytotoxicity and invasion assays. Gene and protein expression were examined by RT-qPCR, Western blotting and immunohistochemistry. In vivo efficacy of drug synergy was assessed in an orthotopic xenograft mouse HCC model.

Results

In silico data-analysis revealed significantly higher UCH-L1 levels in patient HCC tumours versus non-tumour, associated with reduced overall survival. Low-dose sorafenib upregulated UCH-L1 in HCC cell line Hep3B. Paradoxically, this also promoted invasiveness and sustained MEK1/2-ERK1/2-pathway activation. Combining low-dose sorafenib with LDN57444 produced strong synergistic cytotoxicity in vitro , reverted MAPK-activation and suppressed invasion. Consistently, at low sorafenib dose co-treatment with LDN57444 completely inhibited tumour growth of Hep3B xenografts and enhanced sorafenib efficacy.

Conclusion

LDN57444 sensitises HCC cells to low-dose sorafenib by reverting drug-induced pro-oncogenic signalling and thereby strongly synergises with sorafenib to enhance anti-tumour efficacy in a HCC mouse model. This presents UCH-L1 as a player in treatment-induced adaptive response and supports further exploring UCH-L1-targeting in combination with sorafenib as therapeutic avenue for advanced HCC.

Lay summary

This study explores a new treatment approach for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) by combining two drugs: LDN57444, which blocks the enzyme UCH-L1, and sorafenib, a FDA-approved multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor. We evaluated the effect of this drug combination in vitro using a HCC cell line and in an mouse HCC-model. The drug combination displayed strong, synergy in lowering HCC cell viability, and greatly reduced invasiveness and in vivo tumour growth. LDN57444 sensitised HCC cells to low doses of sorafenib by preventing UCH-L1-mediated activation of pro-oncogenic signalling. These findings highlight the potential of this new drug combination for treating advanced HCC thereby potentially reducing side-effects and countering drug resistance.

Impact and implications

Our preclinical research introduces a novel combination strategy against advanced HCC that holds potential to improve existing therapies, particularly the second-line multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor sorafenib. The proposed combination of sorafenib with an inhibitor of the deubiquitinase UCH-L1 not only enhances sorafenib efficacy but present promise to also counter resistance mechanisms. Moreover, because effective responses are achieved at lower drug doses, this may in addition reduce therapy-associated adverse effects further increasing potential impact. While sorafenib is FDA-approved, the UCH-L1 inhibitor LDN57444 needs further (clinical) development to bring our promising findings to full translational potential for HCC patients and physicians.

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