Abstract

BackgroundTamoxifen treatment of estrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer reduces mortality by 31%. However, over half of advanced ER-positive breast cancers are intrinsically resistant to tamoxifen and about 40% will acquire the resistance during the treatment.MethodsIn order to explore mechanisms underlying endocrine therapy resistance in breast cancer and to identify new therapeutic opportunities, we created tamoxifen-resistant breast cancer cell lines that represent the luminal A or the luminal B. Gene expression patterns revealed by RNA-sequencing in seven tamoxifen-resistant variants were compared with their isogenic parental cells. We further examined those transcriptomic alterations in a publicly available patient cohort.ResultsWe show that tamoxifen resistance cannot simply be explained by altered expression of individual genes, common mechanism across all resistant variants, or the appearance of new fusion genes. Instead, the resistant cell lines shared altered gene expression patterns associated with cell cycle, protein modification and metabolism, especially with the cholesterol pathway. In the tamoxifen-resistant T-47D cell variants we observed a striking increase of neutral lipids in lipid droplets as well as an accumulation of free cholesterol in the lysosomes. Tamoxifen-resistant cells were also less prone to lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) and not vulnerable to compounds targeting the lipid metabolism. However, the cells were sensitive to disulfiram, LCS-1, and dasatinib.ConclusionAltogether, our findings highlight a major role of LMP prevention in tamoxifen resistance, and suggest novel drug vulnerabilities associated with this phenotype.

Highlights

  • Tamoxifen treatment of estrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer reduces mortality by 31%

  • Taken together, our results highlight that tamoxifen resistant cell lines can potentially be used as a representative model for studies of tamoxifen-resistant patients

  • We propose that the breast cancer cells can acquire tamoxifen resistance by dysregulation of different cellular pathways, dependent on their individual molecular phenotypes

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Summary

Introduction

Tamoxifen treatment of estrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer reduces mortality by 31%. Over half of advanced ER-positive breast cancers are intrinsically resistant to tamoxifen and about 40% will acquire the resistance during the treatment. Two thirds of breast cancers are estrogen receptor (ER) positive. In addition to its intended anti-cancer effects, tamoxifen is known to have both direct and indirect effects on the cellular lipid metabolism. Tamoxifen can regulate the lipid balance e.g. by binding to the microsomal antiestrogen binding sites (AEBS), which are associated with cholesterol metabolism [12]. This mechanism has been linked to control cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis

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