Abstract
Neratinib (NE) is an irreversible pan-ERBB tyrosine kinase inhibitor used to treat breast cancers (BCa) with amplification of the ERBB2/HER2/Neu gene or overexpression of the ERBB2 receptor. However, the mechanisms behind this process are not fully understood. Here we investigated the effects of NE on critical cell survival processes in ERBB2+ cancer cells. By kinome array analysis, we showed that NE time-dependently inhibited the phosphorylation of two distinct sets of kinases. The first set, including ERBB2 downstream signaling kinases such as ERK1/2, ATK, and AKT substrates, showed inhibition after 2 h of NE treatment. The second set, which comprised kinases involved in DNA damage response, displayed inhibition after 72 h. Flow cytometry analyses showed that NE induced G0/G1 cell cycle arrest and early apoptosis. By immunoblot, light and electron microscopy, we revealed that NE also transiently induced autophagy, mediated by increased expression levels and nuclear localization of TFEB and TFE3. Altered TFEB/TFE3 expression was accompanied by dysregulation of mitochondrial energy metabolism and dynamics, leading to a decrease in ATP production, glycolytic activity, and a transient downregulation of fission proteins. Increased TFEB and TFE3 expression was also observed in ERBB2-/ERBB1 + BCa cells, supporting that NE may act through other ERBB family members and/or other kinases. Overall, this study highlights NE as a potent activator of TFEB and TFE3, leading to the suppression of cancer cell survival through autophagy induction, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, mitochondrial dysfunction and inhibition of DNA damage response.
Published Version
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