Abstract

Palbociclib, a highly selective CDK4/6 inhibitor, has been shown to be a novel anti-tumor agent that suppresses breast cancer cell proliferation. However, its anti-metastasis activity remains controversial. In the present study, we evaluated whether palbociclib prevented breast cancer cell metastasis and revealed its regulatory mechanism. We found that palbociclib inhibited migration and invasion in the breast cancer cells MDA-MB-231 and T47D. The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) markers, vimentin and Snail, were down-regulated with palbociclib treatment. Moreover, we revealed that this inhibition was mediated by the c-Jun/COX-2 pathway. COX-2 was decreased after palbociclib treatment. The production of PGE2 was also reduced along with COX-2. Additionally, our data showed that c-Jun, a crucial transcriptional regulator of COX-2, was down-regulated by palbociclib. We found that palbociclib weakened the COX-2 promoter binding activity of c-Jun and prevented its translocation from the cytoplasm to cell nuclei. Bioluminescence imaging and tail intravenous injection were used to evaluate the anti-metastasis effect of palbociclib in vivo. The data demonstrated that palbociclib reduced breast cancer metastasis to the lung. These results therefore demonstrated that the anti-metastasis activity of palbociclib is mediated via the c-Jun/COX-2 signaling pathway by inhibiting EMT in breast cancer cells.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is a common malignancy and a significant cause of death in females worldwide [1, 2]

  • The results showed that Rb phosphorylation (Ser 780) was inhibited by palbociclib in a concentrationdependent manner (Fig. 1B)

  • We found that palbociclib significantly suppressed cell migration and invasion

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is a common malignancy and a significant cause of death in females worldwide [1, 2]. Encouraging progress has been made with regard to the diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer in recent years. Chemotherapy, endocrine therapy and targeted agents have remarkably improved the overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) rates of breast cancer [3,4,5]. Metastasis and recurrence are still the critical clinical events in breast cancer. Even in nodenegative breast cancer patients, 25% of patients develop metastasis [6]. The 5-year survival rate is dramatically lowered among patients with distant metastasis. Extensive efforts are required to explore novel therapeutic targets to control metastasis and improve the quality of life among breast cancer patients

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