4.7 Article

Epithelial and stromal cathepsin K and CXCL14 expression in breast tumor progression

Journal

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 14, Issue 17, Pages 5357-5367

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-0732

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute SPORE in Breast Cancer [CA89393]
  2. Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center [CA006516]
  3. Department of Defense [W81XWH-04-1-0452, BCO30054]
  4. National Cancer Institute [CA116235, CA107469, CA090876]
  5. American Cancer Society [RSG-05-154-01-MGO]
  6. Susan G. Komen Foundation

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Purpose: To evaluate the expression of cathepsin K (CTSK) and CXCL14 in stroma land epithelial cells in human breast tumor progression. Experimental Design: We did immunohistochemical analyses of CTSK and CXCL14 expression in normal breast tissue, biopsy sites, benign lesions, ductal carcinoma in situ, and invasive breast tumors of different stages. Expression patterns were related to histopathologic characteristics of the tumors and clinical outcome. The effect of CTSK+ breast stromal fibroblasts on CTSK- breast cancer cells was assessed in coculture. Results: Epithelial expression of CTSK was rarely detected in any of the tissue samples analyzed, whereas CXCL14-positive epithelial cells were found in all tissue types. The expression of CXCL14 was not associated with any tumor or patient characteristics analyzed. Stromal CTSK expression was significantly higher in invasive compared with in situ carcinomas, and in one of the two data sets analyzed, it correlated with higher tumor stage. Among all samples examined, the highest stromal CTSK levels were detected in biopsy sites. Neither epithelial nor stromal expression of CTSK was significantly associated with recurrence-free or overall survival. Coculture of CTSK+ fibroblasts enhanced the invasion of CTSK- breast tumor epithelial cells and this was blocked by CTSK inhibitors. Conclusions: CTSK may function as a paracrine factor in breast tumorigenesis. CTSK+ fibroblasts may play a role in tumor progression by promoting the invasiveness of tumor epithelial cells. The possibility that CTSK inhibitors may have a clinical role in decreasing the risk of tumor progression merits further investigation.

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