| Literature DB >> 27612429 |
Igor Katsyv1,2,3, Minghui Wang2,3, Won Min Song2,3, Xianxiao Zhou2,3, Yongzhong Zhao2,3, Sun Park4, Jun Zhu2,3, Bin Zhang2,3,5, Hanna Y Irie4,5.
Abstract
Aminoacyl tRNA synthetases (ARSs) are a class of enzymes with well-conserved housekeeping functions in cellular translation. Recent evidence suggests that ARS genes may participate in a wide array of cellular processes, and may contribute to the pathology of autoimmune disease, cancer, and other diseases. Several studies have suggested a role for the glutamyl prolyl tRNA synthetase (EPRS) in breast cancers, although none has identified any underlying mechanism about how EPRS contributes to carcinogenesis. In this study, we identified EPRS as upregulated in estrogen receptor positive (ER+) human breast tumors in the TCGA and METABRIC cohorts, with copy number gains in nearly 50% of samples in both datasets. EPRS expression is associated with reduced overall survival in patients with ER+ tumors in TCGA and METABRIC datasets. EPRS expression was also associated with reduced distant relapse-free survival in patients treated with adjuvant tamoxifen monotherapy for five years, and EPRS-correlated genes were highly enriched for genes predictive of a poor response to tamoxifen. We demonstrated the necessity of EPRS for proliferation of tamoxifen-resistant ER+ breast cancer, but not ER- breast cancer cells. Transcriptomic profiling showed that EPRS regulated cell cycle and estrogen response genes. Finally, we constructed a causal gene network based on over 2500 ER+ breast tumor samples to build up an EPRS-estrogen signaling pathway. EPRS and its regulated estrogenic gene network may offer a promising alternative approach to target ER+ breast cancers that are refractory to current anti-estrogens.Entities:
Keywords: EPRS; ER+; breast cancer; gene networks
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27612429 PMCID: PMC5342500 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.11870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1EPRS is upregulated in ER+ breast cancers, and is associated with worse outcomes in ER+ tumors
EPRS is upregulated in all breast cancer subtypes compared to adjacent normal breast in TCGA (A) and METABRIC (B) cohorts. Violin plot color represents significance of student's t-test comparing each subtype with adjacent normal breast. Fraction of TCGA ER+ breast cancer samples in COSMIC (C) and fraction of METABRIC (D) ER+ samples with EPRS copy number gains. High EPRS expression is associated with worse prognosis in patients with ER+ (E) but not ER− (F) breast cancer in TCGA and METABRIC cohorts. “High” and “Low” refer to stratification of patients by median EPRS expression: upper 50% were called “high,” lower 50% were called “low.” Numbers in parenthesis (e.g. 39/309) are [number of patients who died]/[number of patients at risk].
Figure 2EPRS is associated with tamoxifen resistance
(A) Elevated EPRS expression is associated with reduced recurrence-free survival in patients treated with tamoxifen alone for five years (Symmans). (B) EPRS-correlated genes are enriched for gene signatures of nonresponse to tamoxifen in breast cancer patients. Numbers represent Fold Enrichment.
Figure 3EPRS is necessary for proliferation ER+, but not ER− breast cancer cells
(A) EPRS knockdown inhibits growth of MCF7 TamR cells in 3D Matrigel™ culture. (B) Flow cytometric analysis of PI-stained DNA. Numbers are mean percentages from three independent experiments. Color ring represents -log10 (student's t-test p values). C&D) Representative immunoblot of G1/S/G2 proteins in MCF7 TamR (C) and parental (D) cells treated with EPRS or control siRNA in the absence and presence of 20 μM Z-VAD-FMK. (E) EPRS knockdown does not inhibit growth of ER- MDA-MB-453 cells in 3D Matrigel™ culture. Representative immunoblot of EPRS knockdown in MDA-MB-453 cells. (F) Flow cytometric cell cycle analysis of PI-stained MDA-MB-453 cells. Numbers are mean percentages from three independent experiments. siLuc: luciferase-targeting siRNA (control). siEPRS: pool of four unique siEPRS-targeting siRNAs.
Figure 4EPRS-regulated transcriptome
(A) Enrichment of shEPRS differentially-expressed genes for MSigDB Hallmark genesets. Numbers represent Fold Enrichment. (B) shEPRS differential expression signature overlaps with estrogen receptor modulators. (C) QPCR validation of estrogen receptor target downregulation. Error bars represent SEM. Color bars represent -log10 (student's t-test p values). EPRS shRNA-74 shown.
Figure 5Validation of EPRS Bayesian network
(A) An network neighborhood around EPRS. Genes differentially-expressed following EPRS knockdown are highlighted in blue (downregulated) or red (upregulated). (B) Enrichment of EPRS downstream network for the EPRS-downregulated RNA-seq signature. Horizontal dashed line represents −log10 (0.05).
Figure 6EPRS-regulated ESR1 network
(A) EPRS neighborhood encompassing ESR1 target and pathway genes. (B) Overlap of keydriver shRNA signatures with those of EPRS and ESR1 for genes with perturbations available in the LINCS shRNA dataset. (C) As a group, EES driver and EES perturbation signatures show more significant overlaps with the shEPRS signatures than do non-EES genes. (D) EPRS estrogen network keydriver association with survival using Cox and KM models, differential expression in TCGA and METABRIC ER+ tumors compared to adjacent normal breast, protein interactions with ESR1 and EPRS, and differential expression following EPRS knockdown.