posted on 2023-11-15, 08:20authored byHuili Ye, Wengui Shi, Jing Yang, Long Wang, Xiangyan Jiang, Huiming Zhao, Long Qin, Junjie Qin, Lianshun Li, Weiwen Cai, Junhong Guan, Hanteng Yang, Huinian Zhou, Zeyuan Yu, Hui Sun, Zuoyi Jiao
Supplementary figures and tables.
Funding
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
History
ARTICLE ABSTRACT
The chemotherapeutic agent 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) remains the backbone of postoperative adjuvant treatment for gastric cancer. However, fewer than half of patients with gastric cancer benefit from 5-FU–based chemotherapies owing to chemoresistance and limited clinical biomarkers. Here, we identified the SNF2 protein Polo-like kinase 1-interacting checkpoint helicase (PICH) as a predictor of 5-FU chemosensitivity and characterized a transcriptional function of PICH distinct from its role in chromosome separation. PICH formed a transcriptional complex with RNA polymerase II (Pol II) and ATF4 at the CCNA1 promoter in an ATPase-dependent manner. Binding of the PICH complex promoted cyclin A1 transcription and accelerated S-phase progression. Overexpressed PICH impaired 5-FU chemosensitivity in human organoids and patient-derived xenografts. Furthermore, elevated PICH expression was negatively correlated with survival in postoperative patients receiving 5-FU chemotherapy. Together, these findings reveal an ATPase-dependent transcriptional function of PICH that promotes cyclin A1 transcription to drive 5-FU chemoresistance, providing a potential predictive biomarker of 5-FU chemosensitivity for postoperative patients with gastric cancer and prompting further investigation into the transcriptional activity of PICH.
PICH binds Pol II and ATF4 in an ATPase-dependent manner to form a transcriptional complex that promotes cyclin A1 expression, accelerates S-phase progression, and impairs 5-FU chemosensitivity in gastric cancer.