Abstract

e13106 Background: Chemotherapy resistance remains a significant barrier in the effective treatment of patients with triple negative breast cancer (TNBC). TGF-β signaling is a well characterized oncogenic pathway in TNBC that promotes chemoresistance by inducing epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) and tumor stemness. Aurora-A kinase (AURKA) is a serine/threonine kinase responsible for chromosomal stability during mitosis. Significantly, aberrant expression of AURKA induces breast cancer progression. We hypothesized that aberrant activation of TGF-β and AURKA signaling pathways contributes to chemoresistance in TNBC by promoting EMT and tumor stemness and that dual-targeting of these oncoproteins will enhance chemosensitivity. Methods: RNA-Seq data were analyzed from patient derived xenografts (PDx) established from patients with Stage I-III TNBC who received pre-operative taxane and anthracycline based chemotherapy. Chemoresistance was defined as an RCB score of 1-3, and chemosensitivity was defined as an RCB score of 0. Unique TNBC cell lines developed from brain metastasis PDxs (TNBC M14, TNBC M25) were treated in vitro with 10nM docetaxel (DTX), 50nM LY2157299 (TGF-β inhibitor) and 50nM MLN8237 (AURKA inhibitor). EMT reprogramming was determined by measuring the expression of vimentin, ALDH activity and mammosphere growth. Apoptotic cells following drug treatment were labeled with Red Annexin-V marker and monitored in real time using the IncuCyte instrument. Results: RNA-Seq revealed that there was no baseline difference in expression of AURKA between chemoresistant and chemosensitive TNBC PDxs. However, there was a 2.7-fold increase in AURKA expression in the post-treatment PDx models compared to pre-treatment PDx models. In vitro treatment of the M14 and M25 cell lines with DTX demonstrated no significant increase in apoptotic cells compared to control, whereas treatment with the combination of DTX, LY2157299 and MLN8237 resulted in a two-fold increase in apoptosis compared to treatment with DTX alone (p = 0.0068 M14, p = 0.003 M25). Dual-targeting with LY2157299 and MLN8237 reduced the expression of vimentin and ALDH activity. Conclusions: TGF-β and AURKA play a central role inducing EMT and a stem-cell-like phenotype in TNBC that confers chemoresistance. AURKA is up-regulated after exposure to chemotherapy in chemoresistant TNBC PDx models. LY2157299 and MLN8237 reduce TNBC stemness in M14 and M25 cell lines and enhance DTX chemosensitivity. Dual-targeting of TGF-β and AURKA is a potentially promising approach in chemoresistant TNBC.

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