Abstract

BackgroundBasal-like breast cancer (BLBC) is a poor prognosis subgroup of triple-negative carcinomas that still lack specific target therapies and accurate biomarkers for treatment selection. P-cadherin is frequently overexpressed in these tumors, promoting cell invasion, stem cell activity and tumorigenesis by the activation of Src-Family kinase (SRC) signaling. Therefore, our aim was to evaluate if the treatment of BLBC cells with dasatinib, the FDA approved SRC inhibitor, would impact on P-cadherin induced tumor aggressive behavior.MethodsP-cadherin and SRC expression was evaluated in a series of invasive Breast Cancer and contingency tables and chi-square tests were performed. Cell-cell adhesion measurements were performed by Atomic Force Microscopy, where frequency histograms and Gaussian curves were applied. 2D and 3D cell migration and invasion, proteases secretion and self-renew potential were evaluated in vitro. Student’s t-tests were used to determine statistically significant differences. The cadherin/catenin complex interactions were evaluated by in situ proximity-ligation assay, and statistically significant results were determined by using Mann-Whitney test with a Bonferroni correction. In vivo xenograft mouse models were used to evaluate the impact of dasatinib on tumor growth and survival. ANOVA test was used to evaluate the differences in tumor size, considering a confidence interval of 95%. Survival curves were estimated by the Kaplan-Meier’s method, using the log-rank test to assess significant differences for mice overall survival.ResultsOur data demonstrated that P-cadherin overexpression is significantly associated with SRC activation in breast cancer cells, which was also validated in a large series of primary tumor samples. SRC activity suppression with dasatinib significantly prevented the in vitro functional effects of P-cadherin overexpressing cells, as well as their in vivo tumorigenic and metastatic ability, by increasing mice overall survival. Mechanistically, SRC inhibition affects P-cadherin downstream signaling, rescues the E-cadherin/p120-catenin complex to the cell membrane, recovering cell-cell adhesion function.ConclusionsIn conclusion our findings show that targeting P-cadherin/SRC signaling and functional activity may open novel therapeutic opportunities for highly aggressive and poor prognostic basal-like breast cancer.

Highlights

  • Basal-like breast cancer (BLBC) is a poor prognosis subgroup of triple-negative carcinomas that still lack specific target therapies and accurate biomarkers for treatment selection

  • P-cadherin/CDH3 overexpression is significantly associated with Src-Family kinase (SRC) activation in human breast cancer cells In order to confirm the association between P-cadherin and SRC activation, we started by analysing the expression of CDH3 (P-cadherin codifying gene) and SRC associated genes (SRC, YES1, FYN, LYN, LCK, CSK) in a public database of breast cancer cell lines belonging to different molecular subtypes (Fig. 1a) [CCLE database [20]]

  • In contrast to what was observed for E-cadherin expression, which did not alter upon genetic manipulation of P-cadherin, a decrease of p120ctn membrane intensity was observed in P-cadherin overexpressing cells (Fig. 1e-f )

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Summary

Introduction

Basal-like breast cancer (BLBC) is a poor prognosis subgroup of triple-negative carcinomas that still lack specific target therapies and accurate biomarkers for treatment selection. It is urgent to find specific biomarkers/pathways that could impact the effective treatment of these poor prognosis breast carcinomas or accurate predictive molecular indicators that could be used to select patients for target therapies already available. We and others have found that the majority of these aggressive breast carcinomas express the basal marker P-cadherin (a cell-cell adhesion molecule), which overexpression is significantly associated to a worse disease-free and overall patient survival [5, 7, 8], as well as with a pro-invasive and stem-like cell behaviour [9,10,11,12,13,14]. In order to evaluate the role of P-cadherin/SRC signaling activation in BLBC cells, we have used dasatinib (an FDA approved SRC inhibitor) to block this pathway and prevent P-cadherin induced aggressive behavior of BLBC cells

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