4.3 Article

Organ-specific adaptive signaling pathway activation in metastatic breast cancer cells

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 14, Pages 12682-12696

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.3707

Keywords

breast cancer; brain metastasis; NF-kB; DMAPT; TMEM47

Funding

  1. Susan G. Komen for the Cure [SAC110025]
  2. Zeta Tau Sorority
  3. 100 Voices of Hope
  4. IUPUI Signature Center
  5. National Institutes of Health [CA111198]
  6. IU Medical Scientist Training Program [5T32GM77229-5]

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Breast cancer metastasizes to bone, visceral organs, and/or brain depending on the subtype, which may involve activation of a host organ-specific signaling network in metastatic cells. To test this possibility, we determined gene expression patterns in MDA-MB-231 cells and its mammary fat pad tumor (TMD-231), lung-metastasis (LMD-231), bone-metastasis (BMD-231), adrenal-metastasis (ADMD-231) and brain-metastasis (231-BR) variants. When gene expression between metastases was compared, 231-BR cells showed the highest gene expression difference followed by ADMD-231, LMD-231, and BMD-231 cells. Neuronal transmembrane proteins SLITRK2, TMEM47, and LYPD1 were specifically overexpressed in 231-BR cells. Pathway-analyses revealed activation of signaling networks that would enable cancer cells to adapt to organs of metastasis such as drug detoxification/oxidative stress response/semaphorin neuronal pathway in 231-BR, Notch/orphan nuclear receptor signals involved in steroidogenesis in ADMD-231, acute phase response in LMD-231, and cytokine/hematopoietic stem cell signaling in BMD-231 cells. Only NF-kappa B signaling pathway activation was common to all except BMD-231 cells. We confirmed NF-kappa B activation in 231-BR and in a brain metastatic variant of 4T1 cells (4T1-BR). Dimethylaminoparthenolide inhibited NF-kappa B activity, LYPD1 expression, and proliferation of 231-BR and 4T1-BR cells. Thus, transcriptome change enabling adaptation to host organs is likely one of the mechanisms associated with organ-specific metastasis and could potentially be targeted therapeutically.

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