Abstract

Abstract Background: Although breast cancer liver metastases (BCLM) are common events, with 40-50% of patients with metastatic breast cancer developing liver metastases, their development indicates poor prognosis. Patients with BCLM have a 5-year survival rate of 8%. Specific treatments for liver metastases are virtually non-existent, partly because the key events of early liver metastasis formation remain unknown. The liver is a dense organ, and metastatic breast cancer cells (MCC) must clear space among hepatocytes, the primary cell population in the liver, during metastatic formation. Cell competition is a developmentally conserved process that explains how organs or primary tumors form when cells within those tissues have varying fitness and compete with one another. This competition can result in the survival and expansion of one cell population, and the induction of cell death through apoptosis in the other. We hypothesized that MCC use cell competition with hepatocytes to create space and expand within the liver. Objectives: In this study, we tested the hypothesis that MCC use cell competition with hepatocytes to create space and expand within the liver, resulting in hepatocyte apoptosis. Methods: We develop new in-vitro and mouse lineage-traced models to assay cell competition between MCC and hepatocytes, initially using balb/c derived breast cancer (4T1) and hepatocyte (H2.35) cells and syngeneic mouse models of liver metastasis. These models directly capture MCC and hepatocyte interactions, and we can assess modes of cell competition, including apoptosis, through immunostaining. Because prior literature suggests that the developing mammary gland informs both cell competition and metastasis, we next performed a bioinformatics screen to identify potential signals that contribute to cell competition between MCC and hepatocytes. We generated a new single-cell RNA-seq dataset that incorporates information from the developing mammary gland and breast cancer cells. This dataset includes 3264 primary breast cancer cells across 3 models of aggressive breast cancers, encompassing HER2+ and TNBC subtypes, as well as 526 embryonic mammary gland cells. Using this platform, we identify genes enriched in both breast cancer and the developing mammary gland. Next, we validate genes by testing for their high expression in MCC when compared to hepatocytes. Then, we determine the impact of target genes on cell competition in our models. Results/Discussion: Our models demonstrate that MCC use cell competition to create space in the liver by inducing apoptosis in neighboring hepatocytes. MCC induce apoptosis in neighboring hepatocytes through cell competition in in-vitro co-cultures by 11.7-fold compared to MCC apoptosis. Hydrodynamic tail-vein engraftment in NOD-scid-gamma mice livers with MCC also resulted in increased neighboring hepatocyte apoptosis. Using our bioinformatics screen, we identified 5 potential targets that could drive breast cancer metastasis and cell competition. Using our competition models, perturbation of SerpinE2, a protease inhibitor which was one of the top gene targets, successfully modulated competition between MCC and hepatocytes. Knock-out of SerpinE2 in MCC did not affect their viability or growth but resulted in MCC apoptosis adjacent to hepatocyte neighbors by 16.9-fold when compared to wild type conditions. Further, co-culture of MCC that lacked SerpinE2 with hepatocytes resulted in decreased hepatocyte apoptosis by 2.3-fold compared to hepatocytes co-cultured with wild-type (WT) MCC. These findings suggest that hepatocytes cannot outcompete or kill WT MCC, but they can outcompete and kill MCC that lack SerpinE2. Future work focused on the perturbation of SerpinE2 may lead to novel therapies for patients at risk for or with BCLM. Our findings suggest that restoring the competitiveness of the liver parenchyma could be a new treatment modality for treating liver metastases. Citation Format: Katherine Lake, Sakshi Mohta, Clayton Smith, Venkata Repaka, Lily Xu, Kaitlyn Saunders, Vrushali Pandit, Emily Goff, Christine Zhang, Jacob Pena, Christine Hodgdon, Julia Maues, Elizabeth Chen, Isaac Chan. Treating liver metastases by reversing cell competition between metastatic cancer cells and hepatocytes [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2023 Dec 5-9; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(9 Suppl):Abstract nr PO5-25-01.

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