Abstract

BackgroundDevelopment of metastases and drug resistance are still a challenge for a successful systemic treatment in breast cancer (BC) patients. One of the mechanisms that confer metastatic properties to the cell relies in the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Moreover, both EMT and metastasis are partly modulated through epigenetic mechanisms, by repression or induction of specific related genes.MethodsWe applied shRNAs and drug targeting approaches in BC cell lines and metastatic patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models to inhibit WDR5, the core subunit of histone H3 K4 methyltransferase complexes, and evaluate its role in metastasis regulation.ResultWe report that WDR5 is crucial in regulating tumorigenesis and metastasis spreading during BC progression. In particular, WDR5 loss reduces the metastatic properties of the cells by reverting the mesenchymal phenotype of triple negative- and luminal B-derived cells, thus inducing an epithelial trait. We also suggest that this regulation is mediated by TGFβ1, implying a prominent role of WDR5 in driving EMT through TGFβ1 activation. Moreover, such EMT reversion can be induced by drug targeting of WDR5 as well, leading to BC cell sensitization to chemotherapy and enhancement of paclitaxel-dependent effects.ConclusionsWe suggest that WDR5 inhibition could be a promising pharmacologic approach to reduce cell migration, revert EMT, and block metastasis formation in BC, thus overcoming resistance to standard treatments.

Highlights

  • Development of metastases and drug resistance are still a challenge for a successful systemic treatment in breast cancer (BC) patients

  • We suggest that WDR5 inhibition could be a promising pharmacologic approach to reduce cell migration, revert epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and block metastasis formation in BC, overcoming resistance to standard treatments

  • WDR5 promotes breast cancer growth in vivo In our previous study, we performed a loss of function shRNA screening in the MCF10DCIS.com BC cell line to identify epigenetic targets driving tumorigenesis [30]

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Summary

Introduction

Development of metastases and drug resistance are still a challenge for a successful systemic treatment in breast cancer (BC) patients. One of the mechanisms that confer metastatic properties to the cell relies in the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Both EMT and metastasis are partly modulated through epigenetic mechanisms, by repression or induction of specific related genes. TGFβ1 signaling may control EMT and metastasis by sustaining the epigenetic machinery through the DNA binding activity of DNMT1 [8] or the histone methylation-coupled transcriptional activation or repression of PRMT5-MEP50 axis [9]. Numerous epigenetic modifiers (i.e., HDACs, LSD1, SET8, PRC1/2, PRMT7, and BRG1) seem to give a great contribution to such a modulation since histone modifications (acetylation/deacetylation and methylation/demethylation) are implicated in either inducing or repressing specific sets of EMT-related genes (SNAI1/2, TWIST1/2 and ZEB1/ 2) [10, 11]

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