4.5 Article

Genetic depletion and pharmacological targeting of αv integrin in breast cancer cells impairs metastasis in zebrafish and mouse xenograft models

Journal

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/s13058-015-0537-8

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Funding

  1. Cancer Genomics Centre Netherlands
  2. Swedish Cancerfonden [09 0773, 090773]
  3. LeDucq foundation Transatlantic Network of Excellence
  4. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [R14C070002]
  5. Chinese National Natural Science Funds [31471315]

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Introduction: Increased expression of alpha v integrins is frequently associated with tumor cell adhesion, migration, invasion and metastasis, and correlates with poor prognosis in breast cancer. However, the mechanism by which alpha v integrins can enhance breast cancer progression is still largely unclear. The effects of therapeutic targeting of alpha v integrins in breast cancer also have yet to be investigated. Methods: We knocked down alpha v integrin in MDA-MB-231 and MCF10A-M4 breast cancer cells, or treated these cells with the alpha v antagonist GLPG0187. The effects of alpha v integrin depletion on mesenchymal markers, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta)/Smad signaling and TGF-beta-induced target gene expression were analyzed in MDA-MB-231 cells by RNA analysis or Western blotting. The function of alpha v integrin on breast cancer cell migration was investigated by transwell assay in vitro, and its effect on breast cancer progression was assessed by both zebrafish and mouse xenografts in vivo. In the mouse model, GLPG0187 was administered separately, or in combination with the standard-of-care anti-resorptive agent zoledronate and the chemotherapeutic drug paclitaxel, to study the effects of combinational treatments on breast cancer metastasis. Results: Genetic interference and pharmacological targeting of alpha v integrin with GLPG0187 in different breast cancer cell lines inhibited invasion and metastasis in the zebrafish or mouse xenograft model. Depletion of alpha v integrin in MDA-MB-231 cells inhibited the expression of mesenchymal markers and the TGF-beta/Smad response. TGF-beta induced alpha v integrin mRNA expression and alpha v integrin was required for TGF-beta-induced breast cancer cell migration. Moreover, treatment of MDA-MB-231 cells with non-peptide RGD antagonist GLPG0187 decreased TGF-beta signaling. In the mouse xenografts GLPG0187 inhibited the progression of bone metastasis. Maximum efficacy of inhibition of bone metastasis was achieved when GLPG0187 was combined with the standard-of-care metastatic breast cancer treatments. Conclusion: These findings show that alpha v integrin is required for efficient TGF-beta/Smad signaling and TGF-beta-induced breast cancer cell migration, and for maintaining a mesenchymal phenotype of the breast cancer cells. Our results also provide evidence that targeting alpha v integrin could be an effective therapeutic approach for treatment of breast cancer tumors and/or metastases that overexpress alpha v integrin.

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