Role of ERalpha/NOTCH4 axis in sustaining stemness in breast cancer cells
Creato da
Elena Spina, Elena Spina
Andò, Sebastiano
Metadata
Mostra tutti i dati dell'itemDescrizione
Formato
/
Dottorato di Ricerca in Medicina Traslazionale. Ciclo XXX; Early detection and new therapeutic strategies have improved breast cancer patient
outcome and survival rates in the last years. However, breast cancer still remains the
second leading cause of cancer-related deaths among women worldwide, and
approximately 30% of patients eventually experience a tumor relapse.
Treatment failure is mainly due to metastatic process and resistance to conventional
therapy. Over the past decade it has been established the existence of a subpopulation of
cancer stem cell (CSC) within breast cancers that is responsible for tumor initiation,
progression and resistance to endocrine therapies. It is well known the “driving role” of
oestrogens and its receptor alpha (ERα), in development and progression of breast cancer
disease, but still unknown their role in regulating breast CSCs (BCSCs).
In the past few years, several studies revealed the presence of gain-of-function mutation
in ESR1, gene encoding for ERα, in metastatic breast cancer patients after long-term
endocrine therapies treatment. Particularly, Y537N, Y537S and D538G are the most
frequent “hot spot” mutations within ERα hormone-binding domain (HBD) that lead to
ligand-independent ERα activity and consequently, resistance to endocrine therapy.
Here, we studied how HBD-ESR1 mutations might account for a mechanism of
metastatic process and endocrine resistance, sustaining stem cell-like phenotype.
As experimental model, we used breast cancer cell lines expressing wild-type and HBDESR1
mutations. Our results, using in vivo and in vitro experiment (mammosphereforming
assay and CD44+/CD24- phenotype analysis) have suggested an enrichment of
BCSCs activity by HBD-ESR1 mutations, that seems to be sustained by Notch4 signaling
through constitutive hyper phosphorylation of Serine 118 residue of ERα that has been
demonstrated related to stem cell phenotype and tumor initiation, in mutant-expressing
cells. Experiments conducted using CRISPR-Cas9 knock-in of Y537S-ERα mutation
confirmed the role of this mutation in tumor initiation and progression as obtained using
HBD-ESR1 stable clones.
We propose a potential novel role of HBD-ESR1 mutations in sustaining BCSCs activity,
that could have clinical relevance, suggesting new molecular biomarker and target to aim
better therapeutic strategies for ERα-positive breast cancer metastatic patients.; Università della CalabriaSoggetto
Endocrinology; Steroid hormones; Breast; Cancer
Relazione
MED/04;