Carboxyl-terminal modulator protein facilitates tumor metastasis in triple-negative breast cancer

Author:

Lin Cheng-Han,Lin Wen-Der,Huang Yun-Chin,Chen Yu-Chia,Loh Zhu-Jun,Ger Luo-Ping,Lin Forn-Chia,Li Hao-Yi,Cheng Hui-Chuan,Lee Kuen-Haur,Hsiao MichaelORCID,Lu Pei-JungORCID

Abstract

AbstractCurrently, the survival rate for breast cancer is more than 90%, but once the cancer cells metastasize to distal organs, the survival rate is dramatically reduced, to less than 30%. Triple-negative breast cancer accounts for 15-20% of all breast cancers. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is associated with poor prognostic and diagnostic outcomes due to the limiting therapeutic strategies, relative to non-TNBC breast cancers. Therefore, the development of targeted therapy for TNBC metastasis remains an urgent issue. In this study, high Carboxyl-terminal modulator protein (CTMP) is significantly associated with recurrence and disease-free survival rate in TNBC patients. Overexpression of CTMP promotes migration and invasion abilities in BT549 cells. Down-regulating of CTMP expression inhibits migration and invasion abilities in MDA-MB-231 cells. In vivo inoculation of high-CTMP cells enhances distant metastasis in mice. The metastasis incidence rate is decreased in mice injected with CTMP-downregulating MDA-MB-231 cells. Gene expression microarray analysis indicates the Akt-dependent pathway is significantly enhanced in CTMP overexpressing cells compared to the parental cells. Blocking Akt activation via Akt inhibitor treatment or co-expression of the dominant-negative form of Akt proteins successfully abolishes the CTMP mediating invasion in TNBC cells. Our findings suggest that CTMP is a potential diagnostic marker for recurrence and poor disease-free survival in TNBC patients. CTMP promotes TNBC metastasis via the Akt-activation-dependent pathway.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine

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