| Literature DB >> 27746743 |
Wonnam Kim1, John J Wysolmerski1.
Abstract
The calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) is expressed in normal breast epithelial cells and in breast cancer cells. During lactation, activation of the CaSR in mammary epithelial cells increases calcium transport into milk and inhibits parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) secretion into milk and into the circulation. The ability to sense changes in extracellular calcium allows the lactating breast to actively participate in the regulation of systemic calcium and bone metabolism, and to coordinate calcium usage with calcium availability during milk production. Interestingly, as compared to normal breast cells, in breast cancer cells, the regulation of PTHrP secretion by the CaSR becomes rewired due to a switch in its G-protein usage such that activation of the CaSR increases instead of decreases PTHrP production. In normal cells the CaSR couples to Gαi to inhibit cAMP and PTHrP production, whereas in breast cancer cells, it couples to Gαs to stimulate cAMP and PTHrP production. Activation of the CaSR on breast cancer cells regulates breast cancer cell proliferation, death and migration, in part, by stimulating PTHrP production. In this article, we discuss the biology of the CaSR in the normal breast and in breast cancer, and review recent findings suggesting that the CaSR activates a nuclear pathway of PTHrP action that stimulates cellular proliferation and inhibits cell death, helping cancer cells adapt to elevated extracellular calcium levels. Understanding the diverse actions mediated by the CaSR may help us better understand lactation physiology, breast cancer progression and osteolytic bone metastases.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; calcium-sensing receptor; lactation; mammary gland; parathyroid hormone-related protein
Year: 2016 PMID: 27746743 PMCID: PMC5043011 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2016.00440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1The CaSR in normal lactation. Activation of the CaSR in the lactating breast promotes trans-epithelial calcium transport into milk by increasing the activity of the calcium pump, PMCA2. In addition, activation of the CaSR suppresses PTHrP release into milk and into the systemic circulation. Circulating PTHrP acts on osteoblasts (Ob) to increase osteoclast (Oc) development and activity through the RANK/RANKL pathway. This, in turn, stimulates bone resorption and liberates skeletal calcium stores. PTHrP also acts on the kidney to stimulate calcium reabsorption. If serum calcium is decreased, the CaSR decreases calcium transport into milk to decrease calcium utilization and increases PTHrP secretion into the maternal circulation to increase the supply of calcium from skeletal stores. In this way, the CaSR helps to maintain a steady supply of calcium for milk production and protects the mother from hypocalcemia if dietary calcium become limiting.
Figure 2The CaSR-nuclear PTHrP pathway. CaSR activation in breast cancer cells, stimulates PTHrP production through increased intracellular cAMP levels and also promotes the proliferation and inhibits cell death in high extracellular calcium concentrations. The effects of the CaSR on tumor cell growth appear to be mediated by nuclear actions of PTHrP that decrease expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p27kip1 and that prevent nuclear accumulation of apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) which activates apoptotic cell death.
Figure 3The CaSR in breast cancer. In breast cancer cells, stimulation of the CaSR increases PTHrP production. Therefore, the high local calcium concentrations surrounding bone metastases would be expected to stimulate PTHrP secretion, which would stimulate osteoblasts (Ob) to produce more RANKL, thereby driving more osteolysis and releasing growth factors (GF) from the bone matrix that stimulate tumor cell growth. As a result, activation of the CaSR facilitates a feed-forward, vicious cycle of bone resorption, tumor growth and osteolysis. In addition, the CaSR increase the PMCA2 calcium pump activity to protect the breast cancer cells from calcium-mediated apoptosis, and regulates the TRPC1 calcium channel, which can stimulate proliferation. Finally, as outlined in Figure 2, activation of the CaSR promotes breast cancer cell proliferation and enhances cell survival by activating a nuclear PTHrP signaling pathway that inhibits p27kip1 and AIF respectively. These findings suggest that extracellular calcium may promote tumor cell growth by activating the CaSR, which, in turn, can activate PTHrP-dependent and PTHrP-independent signaling pathways that stimulate cancer cell proliferation, inhibit cancer cell death and promote osteoclastic bone resorption.