DPYSL3 modulates mitosis, migration, and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in claudin-low breast cancer

Author:

Matsunuma Ryoichi,Chan Doug W.,Kim Beom-Jun,Singh Purba,Han Airi,Saltzman Alexander B.,Cheng Chonghui,Lei Jonathan T.,Wang Junkai,Roberto da Silva Leonardo,Sahin Ergun,Leng Mei,Fan Cheng,Perou Charles M.ORCID,Malovannaya AnnaORCID,Ellis Matthew J.ORCID

Abstract

A Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium (CPTAC) proteogenomic analysis prioritized dihydropyrimidinase-like-3 (DPYSL3) as a multilevel (RNA/protein/phosphoprotein) expression outlier specific to the claudin-low (CLOW) subset of triple-negative breast cancers. A PubMed informatics tool indicated a paucity of data in the context of breast cancer, which further prioritized DPYSL3 for study. DPYSL3 knockdown in DPYSL3-positive (DPYSL3+) CLOW cell lines demonstrated reduced proliferation, yet enhanced motility and increased expression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) markers, suggesting that DPYSL3 is a multifunctional signaling modulator. Slower proliferation in DPYSL3-negative (DPYSL3) CLOW cells was associated with accumulation of multinucleated cells, indicating a mitotic defect that was associated with a collapse of the vimentin microfilament network and increased vimentin phosphorylation. DPYSL3 also suppressed the expression of EMT regulators SNAIL and TWIST and opposed p21 activated kinase 2 (PAK2)-dependent migration. However, these EMT regulators in turn induce DPYSL3 expression, suggesting that DPYSL3 participates in negative feedback on EMT. In conclusion, DPYSL3 expression identifies CLOW tumors that will be sensitive to approaches that promote vimentin phosphorylation during mitosis and inhibitors of PAK signaling during migration and EMT.

Funder

Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas

Susan G. Komen

HHS | NIH | National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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