| Literature DB >> 29086922 |
Hendrika M Duivenvoorden1, Jai Rautela1,2,3,4, Laura E Edgington-Mitchell1,5, Alex Spurling1, David W Greening1, Cameron J Nowell5, Timothy J Molloy6, Elizabeth Robbins7, Natasha K Brockwell1, Cheok Soon Lee7,8,9,10, Maoshan Chen1, Anne Holliday7, Cristina I Selinger7, Min Hu11, Kara L Britt12, David A Stroud13, Matthew Bogyo14, Andreas Möller15, Kornelia Polyak11, Bonnie F Sloane16,17, Sandra A O'Toole8,18,19, Belinda S Parker1.
Abstract
Mammography screening has increased the detection of early pre-invasive breast cancers, termed ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), increasing the urgency of identifying molecular regulators of invasion as prognostic markers to predict local relapse. Using the MMTV-PyMT breast cancer model and pharmacological protease inhibitors, we reveal that cysteine cathepsins have important roles in early-stage tumorigenesis. To characterize the cell-specific roles of cathepsins in early invasion, we developed a DCIS-like model, incorporating an immortalized myoepithelial cell line (N1ME) that restrained tumor cell invasion in 3D culture. Using this model, we identified an important myoepithelial-specific function of the cysteine cathepsin inhibitor stefin A in suppressing invasion, whereby targeted stefin A loss in N1ME cells blocked myoepithelial-induced suppression of breast cancer cell invasion. Enhanced invasion observed in 3D cultures with N1ME stefin A-low cells was reliant on cathepsin B activation, as addition of the small molecule inhibitor CA-074 rescued the DCIS-like non-invasive phenotype. Importantly, we confirmed that stefin A was indeed abundant in myoepithelial cells in breast tissue. Use of a 138-patient cohort confirmed that myoepithelial stefin A (cystatin A) is abundant in normal breast ducts and low-grade DCIS but reduced in high-grade DCIS, supporting myoepithelial stefin A as a candidate marker of lower risk of invasive relapse. We have therefore identified myoepithelial cell stefin A as a suppressor of early tumor invasion and a candidate marker to distinguish patients who are at low risk of developing invasive breast cancer, and can therefore be spared further treatment.Entities:
Keywords: 3D culture; breast cancer; cystatin A; cysteine cathepsins; myoepithelial cells; stefin A
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29086922 DOI: 10.1002/path.4990
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol ISSN: 0022-3417 Impact factor: 7.996