4.6 Article

LGR5 in breast cancer and ductal carcinoma in situ: a diagnostic and prognostic biomarker and a therapeutic target

Journal

BMC CANCER
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-06986-z

Keywords

LGR5; Breast cancer; DCIS; Estrogen receptor; Targeted therapy

Categories

Funding

  1. Cancer League award
  2. National Cancer Institute [CA057621, CA180039, CA199315, CA190851]
  3. California Breast Cancer Research Program [23IB-001]
  4. National Institutes of Dental and Craniofacial Research [R35_DE026602]
  5. Tegger Foundation
  6. Wenner-Gren Foundations
  7. Swedish Society of Medicine
  8. Lakaresallskapet i Lund
  9. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  10. Taiwan Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST104-2917-I-006-002]
  11. Sweden-America Foundation

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Background Novel biomarkers are required to discern between breast tumors that should be targeted for treatment from those that would never become clinically apparent and/or life threatening for patients. Moreover, therapeutics that specifically target breast cancer (BC) cells with tumor-initiating capacity to prevent recurrence are an unmet need. We investigated the clinical importance of LGR5 in BC and ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) to explore LGR5 as a biomarker and a therapeutic target. Methods We stained BC (n = 401) and DCIS (n = 119) tissue microarrays with an antibody against LGR5. We examined anLGR5knockdown ER(-)cell line that was orthotopically transplanted and used for in vitro colony assays. We also determined the tumor-initiating role of Lgr5 in lineage-tracing experiments. Lastly, we transplanted ER(-)patient-derived xenografts into mice that were subsequently treated with a LGR5 antibody drug conjugate (anti-LGR5-ADC). Results LGR5 expression correlated with small tumor size, lower grade, lymph node negativity, and ER-positivity. ER(+)patients with LGR5(high)tumors rarely had recurrence, while high-grade ER(-)patients with LGR5(high)expression recurred and died due to BC more often. Intriguingly, all the DCIS patients who later died of BC had LGR5-positive tumors. Colony assays and xenograft experiments substantiated a role for LGR5 in ER(-)tumor initiation and subsequent growth, which was further validated by lineage-tracing experiments in ER-/triple-negative BC mouse models. Importantly, by utilizing LGR5(high)patient-derived xenografts, we showed that anti-LGR5-ADC should be considered as a therapeutic for high-grade ER-BC. Conclusion LGR5 has distinct roles in ER(-)vs. ER+BC with potential clinical applicability as a biomarker to identify patients in need of therapy and could serve as a therapeutic target for high-grade ER-BC.

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