Abstract

BackgroundProgression to stage IV disease remains the main cause of breast cancer-related deaths. Increasing knowledge on the hematogenous phase of metastasis is key for exploiting the entire window of opportunity to interfere with early dissemination and to achieve a more effective disease control. Recent evidence suggests that circulating tumor cells (CTCs) possess diverse adaptive mechanisms to survive in blood and eventually metastasize, encouraging research into CTC-directed therapies.MethodsOn the hypothesis that the distinguishing molecular features of CTCs reveal useful information on metastasis biology and disease outcome, we compared the transcriptome of CTCs, primary tumors, lymph-node and lung metastases of the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model, and assessed the biological role of a panel of selected genes, by in vitro and in vivo functional assays, and their clinical significance in M0 and M+ breast cancer patients.ResultsWe found that hematogenous dissemination is governed by a transcriptional program and identified a CTC signature that includes 192 up-regulated genes, mainly related to cell plasticity and adaptation, and 282 down-regulated genes, involved in chromatin remodeling and transcription. Among genes up-regulated in CTCs, FADS3 was found to increases cell membrane fluidity and promote hematogenous diffusion and lung metastasis formation. TFF3 was observed to be associated with a subset of CTCs with epithelial-like features in the experimental model and in a cohort of 44 breast cancer patients, and to play a role in cell migration, invasion and blood-borne dissemination. The analysis of clinical samples with a panel of CTC-specific genes (ADPRHL1, ELF3, FCF1, TFF1 and TFF3) considerably improved CTC detection as compared with epithelial and tumor-associated markers both in M0 and stage IV patients, and CTC kinetics informed disease relapse in the neoadjuvant setting.ConclusionsOur findings provide evidence on the potential of a CTC-specific molecular profile as source of metastasis-relevant genes in breast cancer experimental models and in patients. Thanks to transcriptome analysis we generated a novel CTC signature in the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model, adding a new piece to the current knowledge on the key players that orchestrate tumor cell hematogenous dissemination and breast cancer metastasis, and expanding the list of CTC-related biomarkers for future validation studies.

Highlights

  • Progression to stage Cytochrome c oxidase complex IV (IV) disease remains the main cause of breast cancer-related deaths

  • We estimated the variability of the circulating tumor cell (CTC) load in the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model, starting from a pilot experiment on three animals to test our CTC capture and quantification method, and increasing the group size in order to assess the variability in CTC frequency (Fig. 1C)

  • We considered the list of genes significantly up-regulated in CTC compared to primary tumor nodules (PT) samples (­log2FC≥1.5, False discovery rate (FDR)

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Summary

Introduction

Progression to stage IV disease remains the main cause of breast cancer-related deaths. Longstanding breast cancer markers still play a major role in patient selection for standard treatments, and we are assisting substantial improvements in therapeutic protocols to target the primary tumor, therapies intended to prevent distant relapse or directed against an overgrowing population of metastatic cells still fail in ensuring prolonged clinical benefit [6, 7]. A major obstacle towards an effective treatment of advanced or stage IV breast cancer is the lack of comprehensive knowledge of the molecular mechanisms that metastasis-initiating or persistent cells activate to escape primary sites and therapies. The identification of biomarkers associated with such targets is of critical importance for better risk assessment and treatment choice

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