Author:
Bi Mingjun,Zhang Zhao,Xue Pengya,Hernandez Karen,Wang Hu,Fu Xiaoyong,De Angelis Carmine,Gao Zhen,Ruan Jianhua,Jin Victor X.,Wang Qianben,Marangoni Elisabetta,Huang Tim Hui-Ming,Chen Lizhen,Glass Christopher K.,Li Wei,Schiff Rachel,Liu Zhijie
Abstract
ABSTRACTAcquired therapy resistance is a major problem for anticancer treatment, yet the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Using an established breast cancer cellular model for endocrine resistance, we show that hormone resistance is associated with enhanced phenotypic plasticity, indicated by a general downregulation of luminal/epithelial differentiation markers and upregulation of basal/mesenchymal invasive markers. Our extensive omics studies, including GRO-seq on enhancer landscapes, demonstrate that the global enhancer gain/loss reprogramming driven by the differential interactions between ERα and other oncogenic transcription factors (TFs), predominantly GATA3 and AP1, profoundly alters breast cancer transcriptional programs. Our functional studies in multiple biological systems including culture and xenograft models of MCF7 and T47D lines support a coordinate role of GATA3 and AP1 in enhancer reprogramming that promotes phenotypic plasticity and endocrine resistance. Collectively, our study implicates that changes in TF-TF and TF-enhancer interactions can lead to genome-wide enhancer reprogramming, resulting in transcriptional dysregulations that promote plasticity and cancer therapy-resistance progression.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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