Abstract

Abstract CD146 (Mcam; Muc18; s-endo; and gicerin) is an integral membrane glycoprotein originally identified in a human malignant melanoma, but mis-expressed in a wider variety of malignancies including breast cancer, where it has been implicated in controlling tumor growth and dissemination. The mechanisms by which CD146 conveys extracellular cues into malignant cellular outputs is not well understood, but its high-level expression in early development and normal mouse mammary stem cells, as well as expression in highly plastic adult pericytes (formerly known as mesenchymal stem cells) suggested to us that it may control cell state plasticity. We tested the role of CD146 in a plastic, stem cell-like mouse mammary tumor cell line derived from the MMTV-PyMT mouse (PY230). We identified domains in the CD146 cytoplasmic tail essential for controlling substrate utilization by upstream kinases in Akt, Mapk, Stat3, and integrin-related signaling pathways that alter cell state plasticity and tumorigenicity. This work suggests that MCAM plays a key role in controlling lineage plasticity in normal and neoplastic mammary cells with relevance for understanding tumor cell plasticity, progression and evasion of targeted cancer therapies. Citation Format: Ozlen Balcioglu, Brooke L. Gates, David W. Freeman, Berhane M. Hagos, Benjamin T. Spike. CD146 couples and sequesters regulatory kinases to control breast cancer cell state plasticity [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 1531.

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