4.7 Article

Focal Adhesion Kinase (FAK)-Hippo/YAP transduction signaling mediates the stimulatory effects exerted by S100A8/A9-RAGE system in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC)

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13046-022-02396-0

Keywords

TNBC; MDA-MB-231; BT-549; A9; RAGE; FAK; Hippo; YAP

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Minister of University and Research (MIUR) [(3407/2018)-PON RI]
  2. Fondazione AIRC [IG 23369, IG 21322, 21651]
  3. Department of Excellence [2018-2022]
  4. Nutritional Sciences of the University of Calabria (Italy)
  5. Sistema Integrato di Laboratori per L'Ambiente-(SILA) [PONa3_00341]
  6. PON Ricerca e Competitivita

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This study aimed to explore the function of the S100A8/A9-RAGE system in TNBC. The results showed that S100A8 and S100A9 were highly expressed in BC, particularly in HER2-positive and TNBC, and were associated with poor clinical outcomes. High RAGE expression was also correlated with poor overall survival in BC patients. The study further revealed that the S100A8/A9-RAGE system triggers FAK activation by engaging a cytoskeleton mechanosensing complex in TNBC cells, and identified the Hippo pathway as the most enriched in BC patients expressing high RAGE levels. The findings suggest that the RAGE-FAK-YAP transduction pathway could be a potential target for halting the aggressive TNBC subtype.
Background Understanding the intricate signaling network involved in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) represents a challenge for developing novel therapeutic approaches. Here, we aim to provide novel mechanistic insights on the function of the S100A8/A9-RAGE system in TNBC. Methods TNM plot analyzer, Kaplan-Meier plotter, Meta-analysis, GEPIA2 and GOBO publicly available datasets were used to evaluate the clinical significance of S100A8/A9 and expression levels of S100A8/A9, RAGE and Filamin family members in breast cancer (BC) subtypes. METABRIC database and Cox proportional hazard model defined the clinical impact of high RAGE expression in BC patients. Multiple bioinformatics programs identified the main enriched pathways within high RAGE expression BC cohorts. By lentiviral system, TNBC cells were engineered to overexpress RAGE. Western blotting, immunofluorescence, nucleus/cytoplasm fractionation, qRT-PCR, gene silencing and luciferase experiments were performed to identify signal transduction mediators engaged by RAGE upon stimulation with S100A8/A9 in TNBC cells. Proliferation, colony formation and transwell migration assays were carried out to evaluate the growth and migratory capacity of TNBC cells. Statistical analysis was performed by ANOVA and independent t-tests. Results We found a remarkable high expression of S100A8 and S100A9 in BC, particularly in HER2-positive and TNBC, with the latter associated to worst clinical outcomes. In addition, high RAGE expression correlated with a poor overall survival in BC. Next, we determined that the S100A8/A9-RAGE system triggers FAK activation by engaging a cytoskeleton mechanosensing complex in TNBC cells. Through bioinformatics analysis, we identified the Hippo pathway as the most enriched in BC patients expressing high RAGE levels. In accordance with these data, we demonstrated the involvement of S100A8/A9-RAGE-FAK signaling in the control of Hippo/YAP activities, and we established the crucial contribution of RAGE-FAK-YAP circuitry in the growth and migratory effects initiated by S100A8/A9 in TNBC cells. Conclusions The present study provides novel mechanistic insights on RAGE actions in TNBC. Moreover, our findings suggest that RAGE-FAK-YAP transduction pathway could be exploited as a druggable system halting the aggressive TNBC subtype.

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