GDPD5 promotes radioresistance and lipid accumulation in rectal cancer by competitively binding to CD55, which facilitates EGFR nuclear translocation and suppresses p53.
Does targeting GDPD5 improve radiosensitivity and reduce lipid accumulation in rectal cancer models?
Rectal cancer models including resistant cell lines, xenograft models, patient-derived organoids, clinical samples, and the GSE68204 cohort
Silencing GDPD5 / targeting the GDPD5-CD55-EGFR interaction
Control models (unsilenced/wild-type)
Radiosensitivity and lipid accumulationsurrogate
GDPD5 promotes radioresistance and lipid accumulation in rectal cancer by binding CD55 and facilitating EGFR nuclear translocation, highlighting a potential therapeutic target to enhance radiosensitivity.
Resistance to neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer diminishes survival benefits, potentially due to dysregulated lipid metabolism, though the mechanisms are unclear. Using the MSigDB database and GSE68204 cohort, we identified lipid metabolism genes linked to radiotherapy resistance. We developed resistant cell lines and xenograft models, and through multi-algorithm analysis (SVM-RFE, RF, LASSO), pinpointed key genes. Molecular mechanisms were explored via Western blotting, co-immunoprecipitation, molecular docking, and functional assays, validated in patient-derived organoids. Our study found that radiotherapy-resistant rectal cancer shows a lipid accumulation phenotype, with an inverse relationship between lipid droplet deposition and radiosensitivity in resistant cell models. The multi-algorithm screening identified GDPD5 as a key regulator. Silencing GDPD5 reduced lipid accumulation and increased radiosensitivity. Mechanistically, GDPD5 competes with CD55, disrupting its interaction with EGFR and promoting EGFR nuclear translocation, which suppresses p53 and leads to lipid buildup and radiotherapy resistance in tumors. Clinical samples showed high GDPD5 and low CD55 levels correlate with EGFR nuclear localization. Patient-derived organoids with high GDPD5 also showed increased radiotherapy resistance. Our findings indicate that GDPD5 facilitates EGFR nuclear translocation by binding to CD55, suppressing p53, and causing lipid accumulation and radiotherapy resistance in tumors. Targeting the GDPD5-CD55-EGFR interaction may enhance radiosensitivity.
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Zhu et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Rectal cancer (n=59). GDPD5 knockdown / Radiotherapy vs. Control was evaluated on Radiotherapy resistance and lipid accumulation. GDPD5 promotes radioresistance and lipid accumulation in rectal cancer by competitively binding to CD55, which facilitates EGFR nuclear translocation and suppresses p53.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d894526c1944d70ce05400 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-026-08711-3
Ruiqiu Zhu
Mingyue Li
Yi Shen
Cell Death and Disease
Nanjing University
Soochow University
Second Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University
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