ALKBH3-regulated m1A of ALDOA potentiates glycolysis and doxorubicin resistance of triple negative breast cancer cells.
- Author:
Yuhua DENG
1
;
Zhiyan CHEN
1
;
Peixian CHEN
1
;
Yaming XIONG
2
;
Chuling ZHANG
2
;
Qiuyuan WU
1
;
Huiqi HUANG
1
;
Shuqing YANG
1
;
Kun ZHANG
1
;
Tiancheng HE
1
;
Wei LI
1
;
Guolin YE
1
;
Wei LUO
2
;
Hongsheng WANG
3
;
Dan ZHOU
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: 3′UTR; ALDOA; ALKBH3; Chemoresistance; Glycolysis; Stability; TNBC; m1A
- From: Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2025;15(6):3092-3106
- CountryChina
- Language:English
- Abstract: Chemotherapy is currently the mainstay of systemic management for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), but chemoresistance significantly impacts patient outcomes. Our research indicates that Doxorubicin (Dox)-resistant TNBC cells exhibit increased glycolysis and ATP generation compared to their parental cells, with this metabolic shift contributing to chemoresistance. We discovered that ALKBH3, an m1A demethylase enzyme, is crucial in regulating the enhanced glycolysis in Dox-resistant TNBC cells. Knocking down ALKBH3 reduced ATP generation, glucose consumption, and lactate production, implicating its involvement in mediating glycolysis. Further investigation revealed that aldolase A (ALDOA), a key enzyme in glycolysis, is a downstream target of ALKBH3. ALKBH3 regulates ALDOA mRNA stability through m1A demethylation at the 3'-untranslated region (3'UTR). This methylation negatively affects ALDOA mRNA stability by recruiting the YTHDF2/PAN2-PAN3 complex, leading to mRNA degradation. The ALKBH3/ALDOA axis promotes Dox resistance both in vitro and in vivo. Clinical analysis demonstrated that ALKBH3 and ALDOA are upregulated in breast cancer tissues, and higher expression of these proteins is associated with reduced overall survival in TNBC patients. Our study highlights the role of the ALKBH3/ALDOA axis in contributing to Dox resistance in TNBC cells through regulation of ALDOA mRNA stability and glycolysis.
