Abstract

Breast cancer patients with tumors lacking the three diagnostic markers (ER, PR, and HER2) are classified as triple-negative (primarily basal-like) and have poor prognosis because there is no disease-specific therapy available. To address this unmet medical need, gene expression analyses using more than a thousand breast cancer samples were conducted, which identified elevated centromere protein E (CENP-E) expression in the basal-a molecular subtype relative to other subtypes. CENP-E, a mitotic kinesin component of the spindle assembly checkpoint, is shown to be induced in basal-a tumor cell lines by the mitotic spindle inhibitor drug docetaxel. CENP-E knockdown by inducible shRNA reduces basal-a breast cancer cell viability. A potent, selective CENP-E inhibitor (PF-2771) was used to define the contribution of CENP-E motor function to basal-like breast cancer. Mechanistic evaluation of PF-2771 in basal-a tumor cells links CENP-E-dependent molecular events (e.g., phosphorylation of histone H3 Ser-10; phospho-HH3-Ser10) to functional outcomes (e.g., chromosomal congression defects). Across a diverse panel of breast cell lines, CENP-E inhibition by PF-2771 selectively inhibits proliferation of basal breast cancer cell lines relative to premalignant ones and its response correlates with the degree of chromosomal instability. Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic efficacy analysis in a basal-a xenograft tumor model shows that PF-2771 exposure is well correlated with increased phospho-HH3-Ser10 levels and tumor growth regression. Complete tumor regression is observed in a patient-derived, basal-a breast cancer xenograft tumor model treated with PF-2771. Tumor regression is also observed with PF-2771 in a taxane-resistant basal-a model. Taken together, CENP-E may be an effective therapeutic target for patients with triple-negative/basal-a breast cancer.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is many diseases coarsely stratified into distinct patient populations using three immunohistochemistry tumor markers: estrogen receptor (ER), pro-Authors' Affiliations: 1Oncology Chemistry, 2Oncology Research Unit, 3Pharmacokinetics, Dynamics and Metabolism, and 4Pharmaceuticals Science, Pfizer Worldwide Research and Development, La Jolla Laboratories, San Diego, CaliforniaNote: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Therapeutics Online.Current address for R

  • Inducible small hairpin RNA studies Basal-like breast cancer HCC1806 cells that were engineered with small hairpin RNA constructs were exposed to doxycycline (1 mg/mL) to induce their expression (CENP-E specific, GCAGAGAGTGTGGATTCTCAG; KIF11 shRNA as a positive control; nontargeting, CAACAAGATGAAGAGCACCAA, luciferase shRNA)

  • Analysis of breast cancer patient survival data reveals that the level of CENPE expression is strongly negatively correlated with disease-specific survival (P 1⁄4 3.68 Â 10À7 by log-rank test; Fig. 1B), indicating that centromere protein E (CENP-E) likely is involved in breast cancer biology

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is many diseases coarsely stratified into distinct patient populations using three immunohistochemistry tumor markers: estrogen receptor (ER), pro-. Authors' Affiliations: 1Oncology Chemistry, 2Oncology Research Unit, 3Pharmacokinetics, Dynamics and Metabolism, and 4Pharmaceuticals Science, Pfizer Worldwide Research and Development, La Jolla Laboratories, San Diego, California. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Therapeutics Online (http://mct.aacrjournals.org/). Martinez: Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, IN; current address for C. Carroll: Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc., San Diego, CA; current address for Z. Huang: Halozyme Therapeutics Inc., San Diego CA; current address for M. Zager: Johnson & Johnson, San Diego, CA; current address for K. Kozminski: Ferring Research Institute Inc., San Diego, CA; current address for J. Yang: Johnson & Johnson, San Diego, CA

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