| Literature DB >> 29212038 |
Kyung-Min Yang1, Eunjin Bae2, Sung Gwe Ahn3, Kyoungwha Pang4, Yuna Park4, Jinah Park2, Jihee Lee4, Akira Ooshima2, Bora Park2, Junil Kim2, Yunshin Jung5, Satoru Takahashi5, Joon Jeong3, Seok Hee Park6, Seong-Jin Kim7.
Abstract
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is considered incurable with currently available treatments, highlighting the need for therapeutic targets and predictive biomarkers. Here, we report a unique role for Bcl-2-associated athanogene 2 (BAG2), which is significantly overexpressed in TNBC, in regulating the dual functions of cathepsin B as either a pro- or anti-oncogenic enzyme. Silencing BAG2 suppresses tumorigenesis and lung metastasis and induces apoptosis by increasing the intracellular mature form of cathepsin B, whereas BAG2 expression induces metastasis by blocking the auto-cleavage processing of pro-cathepsin B via interaction with the propeptide region. BAG2 regulates pro-cathepsin B/annexin II complex formation and facilitates the trafficking of pro-cathespin-B-containing TGN38-positive vesicles toward the cell periphery, leading to the secretion of pro-cathepsin B, which induces metastasis. Collectively, our results uncover BAG2 as a regulator of the oncogenic function of pro-cathepsin B and a potential diagnostic and therapeutic target that may reduce the burden of metastatic breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: BAG2; TGN38; TNBC; breast cancer; cathepsin B; metastasis; tumorigenesis
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29212038 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.11.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423