Elucidation of Altered Pathways in Tumor-Initiating Cells of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer: A Useful Cell Model System for Drug Screening

Author:

Christensen Anne G.1,Ehmsen Sidse1,Terp Mikkel G.1,Batra Richa2,Alcaraz Nicolas2,Baumbach Jan2,Noer Julie B.3,Moreira José3,Leth-Larsen Rikke1,Larsen Martin R.45,Ditzel Henrik J.16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. a Department of Cancer and Inflammation Research, Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark

2. b Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Faculty of Science, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark

3. c Section for Molecular Disease Biology, Department of Veterinary Disease Biology, Section for Molecular Disease Biology, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C, Denmark

4. d Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark

5. e Department of Clinical Biochemistry and Pharmacology, Centre for Clinical Proteomics, Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark

6. f Department of Oncology, Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract A limited number of cancer cells within a tumor are thought to have self-renewing and tumor-initiating capabilities that produce the remaining cancer cells in a heterogeneous tumor mass. Elucidation of central pathways preferentially used by tumor-initiating cells/cancer stem cells (CSCs) may allow their exploitation as potential cancer therapy targets. We used single cell cloning to isolate and characterize four isogenic cell clones from a triple-negative breast cancer cell line; two exhibited mesenchymal-like and two epithelial-like characteristics. Within these pairs, one, but not the other, resulted in tumors in immunodeficient NOD/Shi-scid/IL-2 Rγ null mice and efficiently formed mammospheres. Quantitative proteomics and phosphoproteomics were used to map signaling pathways associated with the tumor-initiating ability. Signaling associated with apoptosis was suppressed in tumor-initiating versus nontumorigenic counterparts with pro-apoptotic proteins, such as Bcl2-associated agonist of cell death (BAD), FAS-associated death domain protein (FADD), and myeloid differentiation primary response protein (MYD88), downregulated in tumor-initiating epithelial-like cells. Functional studies confirmed significantly lower apoptosis in tumor-initiating versus nontumorigenic cells. Moreover, central pathways, including β-catenin and nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB)-related signaling, exhibited increased activation in the tumor-initiating cells. To evaluate the CSC model as a tool for drug screening, we assessed the effect of separately blocking NF-κB and Wnt/β-catenin signaling and found markedly reduced mammosphere formation, particularly for tumor-initiating cells. Similar reduction was also observed using patient-derived primary cancer cells. Furthermore, blocking NF-κB signaling in mice transplanted with tumor-initiating cells significantly reduced tumor outgrowth. Our study demonstrates that suppressed apoptosis, activation of pathways associated with cell viability, and CSCs are the major differences between tumor-initiating and nontumorigenic cells independent of their epithelial-like/mesenchymal-like phenotype. These altered pathways may provide targets for future drug development to eliminate CSCs, and the cell model may be a useful tool in such drug screenings.

Funder

Danish Cancer Society

Danish Research Council

Danish Cancer Research Foundation

A Race Against Breast Cancer

Sino-Danish Breast Cancer Research Centre

NanoCAN Lundbeck Center of Excellence

Region of Southern Denmark

Academy of Geriatric Cancer Research

Danish Center for Translational Breast Cancer research

Lundbeck Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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