Author:
Charmsaz Sara,Doherty Ben,Cocchiglia Sinéad,Varešlija Damir,Marino Attilio,Cosgrove Nicola,Marques Ricardo,Priedigkeit Nolan,Purcell Siobhan,Bane Fiona,Bolger Jarlath,Byrne Christopher,O’Halloran Philip J.,Brett Francesca,Sheehan Katherine,Brennan Kieran,Hopkins Ann M.,Keelan Stephen,Jagust Petra,Madden Stephen,Martinelli Chiara,Battaglini Matteo,Oesterreich Steffi,Lee Adrian V.,Ciofani Gianni,Hill Arnold D. K.,Young Leonie S.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Metastatic breast cancer is a major cause of cancer-related deaths in woman. Brain metastasis is a common and devastating site of relapse for several breast cancer molecular subtypes, including oestrogen receptor-positive disease, with life expectancy of less than a year. While efforts have been devoted to developing therapeutics for extra-cranial metastasis, drug penetration of blood–brain barrier (BBB) remains a major clinical challenge. Defining molecular alterations in breast cancer brain metastasis enables the identification of novel actionable targets.
Methods
Global transcriptomic analysis of matched primary and metastatic patient tumours (n = 35 patients, 70 tumour samples) identified a putative new actionable target for advanced breast cancer which was further validated in vivo and in breast cancer patient tumour tissue (n = 843 patients). A peptide mimetic of the target’s natural ligand was designed in silico and its efficacy assessed in in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo models of breast cancer metastasis.
Results
Bioinformatic analysis of over-represented pathways in metastatic breast cancer identified ADAM22 as a top ranked member of the ECM-related druggable genome specific to brain metastases. ADAM22 was validated as an actionable target in in vitro, ex vivo and in patient tumour tissue (n = 843 patients). A peptide mimetic of the ADAM22 ligand LGI1, LGI1MIM, was designed in silico. The efficacy of LGI1MIM and its ability to penetrate the BBB were assessed in vitro, ex vivo and in brain metastasis BBB 3D biometric biohybrid models, respectively. Treatment with LGI1MIM in vivo inhibited disease progression, in particular the development of brain metastasis.
Conclusion
ADAM22 expression in advanced breast cancer supports development of breast cancer brain metastasis. Targeting ADAM22 with a peptide mimetic LGI1MIM represents a new therapeutic option to treat metastatic brain disease.
Funder
Science Foundation Ireland
Irish Cancer Society
Breast Cancer NOW
EU-FP7
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
9 articles.
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