Abstract

The endogenous ligand-activated aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) plays an important role in numerous biologic processes. As the known number of AHR-mediated processes grows, so too does the importance of determining what endogenous AHR ligands are produced, how their production is regulated, and what biologic consequences ensue. Consequently, our studies were designed primarily to determine whether ER−/PR−/Her2− breast cancer cells have the potential to produce endogenous AHR ligands and, if so, how production of these ligands is controlled. We postulated that: 1) malignant cells produce tryptophan-derived AHR ligand(s) through the kynurenine pathway; 2) these metabolites have the potential to drive AHR-dependent breast cancer migration; 3) the AHR controls expression of a rate-limiting kynurenine pathway enzyme(s) in a closed amplification loop; and 4) environmental AHR ligands mimic the effects of endogenous ligands. Data presented in this work indicate that primary human breast cancers, and their metastases, express high levels of AHR and tryptophan-2,3-dioxygenase (TDO); representative ER−/PR−/Her2− cell lines express TDO and produce sufficient intracellular kynurenine and xanthurenic acid concentrations to chronically activate the AHR. TDO overexpression, or excess kynurenine or xanthurenic acid, accelerates migration in an AHR-dependent fashion. Environmental AHR ligands 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo[p]dioxin and benzo[a]pyrene mimic this effect. AHR knockdown or inhibition significantly reduces TDO2 expression. These studies identify, for the first time, a positive amplification loop in which AHR-dependent TDO2 expression contributes to endogenous AHR ligand production. The net biologic effect of AHR activation by endogenous ligands, which can be mimicked by environmental ligands, is an increase in tumor cell migration, a measure of tumor aggressiveness.

Highlights

  • The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is the only ligandbinding member of the evolutionarily conserved (Hahn, 2002) basic Helix-Loop-Helix/Per-Arnt-Sim family of transcription factors (Hahn, 1998, 2002)

  • Previous studies demonstrate that the AHR is constitutively active in several different types of cancers (Chang and Puga, 1998; Trombino et al, 2000; Roblin et al, 2004; Currier et al, 2005; Yang et al, 2005, 2008; Chang et al, 2007; Barhoover et al, 2010; Korzeniewski et al, 2010; DiNatale et al, 2011), and that it may play a role in tumor invasion and/or migration

  • A significant positive correlation can be seen between AHR and CYP1B1 levels in 58 mammary epithelial cancer cell lines annotated in the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia dataset (FDR 5 3.8 Â 1027) and in 977 mammary tumors represented in the The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset (FDR, 3 Â 10216) (Fig. 1), suggesting that the AHR is constitutively active in human breast cancers in general, presumably because of the presence of endogenous ligands, and that CYP1B1 expression is a useful surrogate marker for AHR expression and/or activity

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Summary

Introduction

The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is the only ligandbinding member of the evolutionarily conserved (Hahn, 2002) basic Helix-Loop-Helix/Per-Arnt-Sim family of transcription factors (Hahn, 1998, 2002). The AHR influences responses to hypoxia (Jensen et al, 2006), TH17, and T regulatory cell development (Funatake et al, 2005; Quintana et al, 2008; Apetoh et al, 2010; Gagliani et al, 2015), antigen presentation (Mezrich et al, 2010; Nguyen et al, 2010), and embryonic (Wang et al, 2013b) and hematopoietic (Casado et al, 2011; Smith et al, 2013) stem cell differentiation Given these findings, it seems likely that aberrant AHR signaling, mediated by exposure to environmental ligands or by excessive production of endogenous ligands, could contribute to multiple pathologic outcomes. We focus on chronic AHR signaling through production of endogenous ligands in breast cancer cells, leading to increased tumor cell migration

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