Inhibition of WNT-CTNNB1 signaling upregulates SQSTM1 and sensitizes glioblastoma cells to autophagy blockers

Author

Nàger Grifo, Mireia

Crespí Sallán, Marta

Visa Pretel, Anna

Pushparaj, Charumathi

Santacana Espasa, Maria

Macià Armengol, Anna

Yeramian Hakim, Andree

Cantí Nicolás, Carles

Herreros Danés, Judit

Publication date

2018-02-14T09:21:01Z

2019-01-09T23:29:18Z

2018-01-09

2018-02-14T09:21:02Z



Abstract

WNT-CTNN1B signaling promotes cancer cell proliferation and stemness. Furthermore, recent evidence indicates that macroautophagy/autophagy regulates WNT signaling. Here we investigated the impact of inhibiting WNT signaling on autophagy in glioblastoma (GBM), a devastating brain tumor. Inhibiting TCF, or silencing TCF4 or CTNNB1/β-catenin upregulated SQSTM1/p62 in GBM at transcriptional and protein levels and, in turn, autophagy. DKK1/Dickkopf1, a canonical WNT receptor antagonist, also induced autophagic flux. Importantly, TCF inhibition regulated autophagy through MTOR inhibition and dephosphorylation, and nuclear translocation of TFEB, a master regulator of lysosomal biogenesis and autophagy. TCF inhibition or silencing additionally affected GBM cell proliferation and migration. Autophagy induction followed by its blockade can promote cancer cell death. In agreement with this notion, halting both TCF-CTNNB1 and autophagy pathways decreased cell viability and induced apoptosis of GBM cells through a SQSTM1-dependent mechanism involving CASP8 (caspase 8). In vivo experiments further underline the therapeutic potential of such dual targeting in GBM.

Document Type

Article
Accepted version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Glioblastoma multiforme; Autofàgia; Autophagy; Glioblastoma; CTNNB1; SQSTM1

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1080/15548627.2017.1423439

Autophagy, 2018, vol. 14, núm. 4, p. 619-636

Rights

(c) Taylor & Francis, 2018

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