4.6 Article

Role of kruppel-like factor 8 for therapeutic drug-resistant multi-organ metastasis of breast cancer

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages 2188-2201

Publisher

E-CENTURY PUBLISHING CORP

Keywords

KLF8; CXCR4; drug resistance; metastasis; breast cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [CA132977]
  2. Florida Breast Cancer Foundation
  3. LIFE@UCF Richard Tucker Grant

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Metastasis and drug resistance in breast cancer are closely linked processes that significantly impact patient prognosis. The KLF8-CXCR4 signaling axis plays a crucial role in chemotherapy resistance and multi-organ metastasis, with aberrant high levels of KLF8 and CXCR4 inducing enhanced tumor angiogenesis and cellular activities related to metastasis. Targeting the KLF8-CXCR4 signaling axis may offer a new therapeutic approach for drug-resistant breast cancer metastasis.
Metastasis and drug resistance are intertwined processes that are responsible for the vast majority of patient deaths from breast cancer. The underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. We previously demonstrated that KLF8 activates CXCR4 transcription in metastatic breast cancer. Here, we report a novel role of KLF8-CXCR4 signaling for converting single organ metastasis into multiple organ metastasis associated with chemotherapeutic resistance. We show that KLF8 expression in metastatic breast cancer cells can be over-induced by chemotherapeutic drugs. Analysis of data from large-cohorts of patients indicates that post-chemotherapy there is a close correlation between the aberrant high levels of KLF8 and CXCR4 and that this correlation is well associated with drug resistance, metastasis, and poor prognosis. To mimic their aberrant high levels, we overexpressed KLF8 or CXCR4 in a human breast cancer cell line known to metastasize only to the lungs after intravenous injection in nude mice. As expected, these cells become more resistant to chemotherapeutic drugs. Surprisingly, these KLF8 or CXCR4 overexpressing cells, even implanted orthotopically, metastasized extensively to multiple organs particularly the CXCL12-rich organs. Tube formation assay, Ki67 staining and Western blotting revealed that KLF8 or CXCR4 overexpression enhanced angiogenesis involving increased expression and secretion of VEGF protein. We also found that KLF8 or CXCR4 overexpression strongly enhanced formation of filopodium-like protrusions and proliferation via CXCR4 stimulation in a 3D culture model mimicking the colonization step of metastasis. Taken together, these results suggest that the chemo-induction of KLF8 upregulation be critical for drug resistance and systemic metastasis through enhanced tumor angiogenesis and colonization via CXCR4 over-activation and that KLF8-CXCR4 signaling axis may be a new therapeutic target for drug-resistant breast cancer metastasis.

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