Abstract

The receptor tyrosine kinase ERBB2 interacts with HSP90 and is overexpressed in aggressive breast cancers. Therapeutic HSP90 inhibitors, i.e. Geldanamycin (GA), target ERBB2 to degradation. We have previously shown that HSP90 is responsible for the missorting of recycling ERBB2 to degradation compartments. In this study, we used biochemical, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy techniques to demonstrate that in SKBR3 human breast cancer cells, GA strongly induces polyubiquitination and internalization of the full-length p185-ERBB2, and promotes its cleavage, with the formation of a p116-ERBB2 form in EEA1-positive endosomes (EE). p116-ERBB2 corresponds to a non-ubiquitinated, signaling-impaired, membrane-bound fragment, which is readily sorted to lysosomes and degraded. To define the sequence of events leading to p116-ERBB2 degradation, we first blocked the EE maturation/trafficking to late endosomes/lysosomes with wortmannin, and found an increase in GA-dependent formation of p116-ERBB2; we then inhibited the proteasome activity with MG-132 or lactacystin, and observed an efficient block of p185-ERBB2 cleavage, and its accumulation in EE, suggesting that p185-ERBB2 polyubiquitination is necessary for proteasome-dependent p116-ERBB2 generation occurring in EE. As polyubiquitination has also been implicated in autophagy-mediated degradation of ERBB2 under different experimental conditions, we exploited this possibility and demonstrate that GA strongly inhibits early autophagy, and reduces the levels of the autophagy markers atg5-12 and LC3-II, irrespective of GA-induced ERBB2 polyubiquitination, ruling out a GA-dependent autophagic degradation of ERBB2. In conclusion, we propose that HSP90 inhibition fosters ERBB2 polyubiquitination and proteasome-dependent generation of a non-ubiquitinated and inactive p116-ERBB2 form in EE, which is trafficked from altered EE to lysosomes.

Highlights

  • ERBB2 is a member of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (ERBB1) family and is chaperoned by HSP90; unlike the other ErbB members (ERBB1, ERBB3 and ERBB4), ERBB2 has no soluble ligands

  • To define the sequence of events leading to p116-ERBB2 degradation, we first blocked the EE maturation/trafficking to late endosomes/lysosomes with wortmannin, and found an increase in GA-dependent formation of p116-ERBB2; we inhibited the proteasome activity with MG-132 or lactacystin, and observed an efficient block of p185-ERBB2 cleavage, and its accumulation in EE, suggesting that p185-ERBB2 polyubiquitination is necessary for proteasome-dependent p116-ERBB2 generation occurring in EE

  • We show that GA induces polyubiquitination of the full length p185-ERBB2, and potentiates the formation of a p116-ERBB2 non-ubiquitinated and signaling impaired fragment in altered early endosomes (EE), which is trafficked via multivescicular bodies (MVBs), and degraded in lysosomes

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Summary

Introduction

ERBB2 is a member of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (ERBB1) family and is chaperoned by HSP90; unlike the other ErbB members (ERBB1, ERBB3 and ERBB4), ERBB2 has no soluble ligands. Upon activation ErbB receptors homo- or hererodimerize and ERBB2 is the preferred dimerization partner, constituting a potent signaling module [1,2,3]. In normal epithelial cells, dimerized ErbB receptors activate AKT and ERKdependent pathways that govern cell proliferation and survival [3]. The molecular mechanisms www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget protecting ERBB2 from downregulation are not yet sufficiently explored, the hyper-stability of ERBB2 at the plasma membrane of overexpressing cells appears to be in part ensured by the interaction with the HSP90 chaperone [6,7,8,9], accompanied by lack of specific endocytic motifs in the ERBB2 sequence [10,11,12]

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