Abstract

BackgroundHER2-positive breast cancer is usually associated to the more aggressive progression and the worse prognosis, but the mechanism underlying the innate resistance to HER2-targeted therapy remains elusive. The scaffold protein SH3-domain-binding glutamic acid-rich protein-like protein (SH3BGRL) is indicated as a tumor suppressor in some cancers, but it is highly expressed in breast cancers. Here we characterized the tumorigenic function of SH3BGRL in HER2-expressing breast cancer cells and the subsequent effect in HER2-targeted therapies.MethodsThe interaction of SH3BGRL to HER2 were characterized with various truncated SH3BGRL mutants by immunoprecipitation and molecule docking simulation. The physiological roles of SH3BGRL interacting with HER2 in tumor progression and therapy implication were characterized by gain and loss of function approaches in vitro and in vivo. Immunohistochemistry was used for detections of SH3BGRL and p-HER2 (Y1196) expressions in xenografted tumors and human breast cancer tissues. Clinical relevance of SH3BGRL expression with HER2 was validated with both breast patient sample and the public data analyses.ResultsOur results demonstrated that SH3BGRL directly binds with HER2 on cell membrane via its motifs α1, α2 helixes and β3 sheet, which postpones HER2 internalization upon EGF stimulation. Consequently, the association between SH3BGRL and HER2 contributed to the prolonged HER2 phosphorylation at specific tyrosine sites, especially at Y1196, and their downstream signaling activation. The relevance between SH3BGRL expression and p-HER2 (Y1196) phosphorylation was validated in both xenografted tumors and the breast cancer patient tissues. Mechanistically, SH3BGRL promoted breast tumor cell proliferation and survival, while reduced the cell sensitivity to anti-tumor drugs, especially to the HER2-targeted drugs. In contrast, Silencing SH3BGRL or inhibiting its downstream signals efficiently induced apoptosis of breast tumor cells with HER2 and SH3BGRL doubly positive expression. Database analysis also highlighted that SH3BGRL is a poor prognostic marker, especially for HER2-positive breast cancers.ConclusionsOur results disclose SH3BGRL as a novel posttranslational modulator of HER2 hyperactivation, which can lead to the intrinsic resistance to HER2-targeted therapy. SH3BGRL would be a pivotal therapy target and a diagnostic marker to HER2-positve patients. Thus, targeting SH3BGRL or the downstream signaling could relieve the innate resistance to some HER2-tageted therapies for both HER2 and SH3BGRL-postive breast cancers.

Highlights

  • Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive breast cancer is usually associated to the more aggressive progression and the worse prognosis, but the mechanism underlying the innate resistance to HER2-targeted therapy remains elusive

  • SH3-domain-binding glutamic acid-rich protein-like protein (SH3BGRL) binds to HER2 via its α2 helix and β3 sheet Previous results indicate that human SH3BGRL functions as a tumor suppressor [16, 17], and only the mutated ones promote tumor metastasis and progression

  • To examine if there is a direct interaction between SH3BGRL and HER2, as HER2 was predicted to interact with SH3BGRL, we firstly co-transfected HEK293T cells with Green fluorescent protein (GFP)-SH3BGRL and YFP-HER2 plasmids

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Summary

Introduction

HER2-positive breast cancer is usually associated to the more aggressive progression and the worse prognosis, but the mechanism underlying the innate resistance to HER2-targeted therapy remains elusive. HER2 usually acts as an orphan receptor to be a heterodimer partner to other EGFR members upon growth factor binding, which triggers receptor tyrosine phosphorylation and the downstream kinases activation for intracellular signaling transduction [4]. This signaling renders multiple critical cellular functions, including cell survival, proliferation, polarity change and migration, while the aberrant HER2 upregulation often occurs in about 20–30% of breast cancers as well as ovarian cancers with poor prognosis [5,6,7,8,9]

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