Abstract

Dysregulated adenosine signaling pathway has been evidenced in the pathogenesis of breast cancer. However, the role of adenosine kinase (ADK) in tumorigenesis remains unclear while it crucially regulates the removal and availability of adenosine. ADK has two isoforms that localize to discrete subcellular spaces: i.e., nuclear, long-isoform (ADK-L) and cytosolic, short-isoform (ADK-S). We hypothesized that these two ADK isoforms would be differentially expressed in breast cancer and may contribute to divergent cellular actions in cancer. In this study, we examined the expression profiles of ADK isoforms in breast cancer tissues from 46 patient and followed up with an in vitro investigation by knocking down the expression of ADK-L or ADK-S using CRISPR gene editing to evaluate the role of ADK isoform in cancer progression and metastasis of cultured triple-negative breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231. We demonstrated that (i) ADK-L expression level was significantly increased in breast cancer tissues versus paired normal tissues adjacent to tumor, whereas the ADK-S expression levels were not significantly different between cancerous and normal tissues; (ii) CRISPR/Cas9-mediated downregulation of ADK isoforms, led to suppressed cellular proliferation, division, and migration of cultured breast cancer cells; (iii) ADK-L knockdown significantly upregulated gene expression of matrix metalloproteinase (ADAM23, 9.93-fold; MMP9, 24.58-fold) and downregulated expression of cyclin D2 (CCND2, -30.76-fold), adhesive glycoprotein THBS1 (-8.28-fold), and cystatin E/M (CST6, -16.32-fold). Our findings suggest a potential role of ADK-L in mitogenesis, tumorigenesis, and tumor-associated tissue remodeling and invasion; and the manipulation of ADK-L holds promise as a therapeutic strategy for aggressive breast cancer.

Highlights

  • Adenosine plays a crucial role in metabolic regulation and many essential physiological functions in humans, such as vasodilation, immune response, inflammation, neuroprotection, arousal, and sleep [1]

  • We examined the expression profiles of adenosine kinase (ADK) isoforms in breast cancer tissues from 46 patient and followed up with an in vitro investigation by knocking down the expression of ADK-L or ADK-S using CRISPR gene editing to evaluate the role of ADK isoform in cancer progression and metastasis of cultured triple-negative breast cancer cell line MDAMB-231

  • We demonstrated that (i) ADK-L expression level was significantly increased in breast cancer tissues versus paired normal tissues adjacent to tumor, whereas the ADK-S expression levels were not significantly different between cancerous and normal tissues; (ii) CRISPR/Cas9-mediated downregulation of ADK isoforms, led to suppressed cellular proliferation, division, and migration of cultured breast cancer cells; (iii) ADK-L knockdown significantly upregulated gene expression of matrix metalloproteinase (ADAM23, 9.93-fold; MMP9, 24.58-fold) and downregulated expression of cyclin D2 (CCND2, -30.76-fold), adhesive glycoprotein THBS1 (-8.28fold), and cystatin E/M (CST6, -16.32-fold)

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Summary

Introduction

Adenosine plays a crucial role in metabolic regulation and many essential physiological functions in humans, such as vasodilation, immune response, inflammation, neuroprotection, arousal, and sleep [1]. While the dysregulation of adenosine and its signaling pathway has been evidenced in cancer [4,5,6,7,8], the blockade of adenosine signaling promotes antitumor responses [8]. Adenosine A2B receptor was identified as a target of the metastasisinducing transcription factor FOS-related antigen 1 (FRA1) in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) [10], and adenosine A2A receptor activation promotes proliferation of breast carcinoma [11]. While adenosine changes in the microenvironment of cancerous tissue determines local activities of adenosinergic pathways, due to its rapid clearance and short half-life in the body, a better therapeutic approach may be to manipulate adenosine metabolism

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