27-Hydroxycholesterol is a specific factor in the neoplastic microenvironment of HCC that causes MDR via GRP75 regulation of the redox balance and metabolic reprogramming.

2021 
Objective Due to the tissue specificity of the liver, long-term exposure to a high concentration of 27-hydroxycholesterol (27HC) is a special characteristic of the tumour microenvironment in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, what occurs after HCC cells are long-term exposure to 27HC and the molecular mechanisms involved remain largely unexamined. Methods A long-term 27HC-treated HepG2 cell line and the xenografts in nude mice were used as experimental models. Molecular mechanisms were investigated using bioinformatics analysis and molecular biological experiments. Results Here, we found that by inducing an increase in oxidative stress signalling, 27HC activated glucose-regulated protein 75 (GRP75). On the one hand, GRP75 resulted in a change in the redox balance by regulating ROS generation and antioxidant system activity via affecting MMP, NRF2, HO-1, and NQO1 levels. On the other hand, GRP75 modified the metabolic reprogramming process by regulating key factors (HIF-1α, p-Akt, and c-myc) and glucose uptake, facilitating HCC cell growth in the inhospitable microenvironment. These two factors caused HCC cells to resist 27HC-induced cytotoxicity and attain multidrug resistance (MDR). Conclusions Our present study not only identified 27HC, a characteristic component of the neoplastic microenvironment of HCC that causes MDR via GRP75 to regulate the redox balance and metabolic reprogramming, but also revealed that targeted intervention by the "switch"-like molecule GRP75 could reverse the effect of 27HC from cancer promotion to cytotoxicity in HCC, suggesting a new strategy for specific intervention of HCC.
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