Abstract
Histone lactylation modification and RNA m(6)A modification play important roles in cisplatin resistance of bladder cancer (BCa). Hypoxia drives cisplatin resistance in BCa by analyzing the TCGA-BLCA cohort, where hypoxia signatures predicted poor overall survival. In vitro, hypoxia elevated lactate production via LDHA, inducing H3K18la catalyzed by KAT2B, which activated RBM15 transcription. RBM15 stabilized IGFBP3 mRNA via m(6)A modification depending on its SPOC domain, increasing IGFBP3 protein. Nuclear translocation of IGFBP3 complexed with p-EGFR/p-DNA-PKcs, enhancing DNA repair and reducing cisplatin-induced damage. Clinically, BCa tissues exhibited elevated LDHA/H3K18la/RBM15/IGFBP3, further amplifying post-cisplatin chemotherapy. Targeting this axis with LDHA inhibitor (stiripentol) and EGFR inhibitor (gefitinib) synergistically reversed cisplatin resistance in vitro and in vivo. This study unveils the "hypoxia-H3K18la-RBM15-IGFBP3" axis as a central driver of cisplatin resistance and proposes dual metabolic-epigenetic inhibition as a therapeutic strategy for refractory BCa.