Literature DB >> 30266755

c-MYC Drives Breast Cancer Metastasis to the Brain, but Promotes Synthetic Lethality with TRAIL.

Junghwa Cha1, Seon Kyu Kim2, Ho Yeon Lee3, Jun Hyung Park3, Ki Hoon Song4, Pilnam Kim1, Mi-Young Kim5,6.   

Abstract

Brain metastasis in breast cancer is particularly deadly, but effective treatments remain out of reach due to insufficient information about the mechanisms underlying brain metastasis and the potential vulnerabilities of brain-metastatic breast cancer cells. Here, human breast cancer cells and their brain-metastatic derivatives (BrMs) were used to investigate synthetic lethal interactions in BrMs. First, it was demonstrated that c-MYC activity is increased in BrMs and is required for their brain-metastatic ability in a mouse xenograft model. Specifically, c-MYC enhanced brain metastasis by facilitating the following processes within the brain microenvironment: (i) invasive growth of BrMs, (ii) macrophage infiltration, and (iii) GAP junction formation between BrMs and astrocytes by upregulating connexin 43 (GJA1/Cx43). Furthermore, RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis uncovered a set of c-MYC-regulated genes whose expression is associated with higher risk for brain metastasis in breast cancer patients. Paradoxically, however, increased c-MYC activity in BrMs rendered them more susceptible to TRAIL (TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand)-induced apoptosis. In summary, these data not only reveal the brain metastasis-promoting role of c-MYC and a subsequent synthetic lethality with TRAIL, but also delineate the underlying mechanism. This suggests TRAIL-based approaches as potential therapeutic options for brain-metastatic breast cancer. IMPLICATIONS: This study discovers a paradoxical role of c-MYC in promoting metastasis to the brain and in rendering brain-metastatic cells more susceptible to TRAIL, which suggests the existence of an Achilles' heel, thus providing a new therapeutic opportunity for breast cancer patients. ©2018 American Association for Cancer Research.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30266755     DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-18-0630

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cancer Res        ISSN: 1541-7786            Impact factor:   5.852


  20 in total

Review 1.  Two Sides of the Same Coin: The Role of Developmental pathways and pluripotency factors in normal mammary stem cells and breast cancer metastasis.

Authors:  M U J Oliphant; Deguang Kong; Hengbo Zhou; M T Lewis; H L Ford
Journal:  J Mammary Gland Biol Neoplasia       Date:  2020-04-22       Impact factor: 2.673

Review 2.  Tilting MYC toward cancer cell death.

Authors:  Colleen T Harrington; Elena Sotillo; Chi V Dang; Andrei Thomas-Tikhonenko
Journal:  Trends Cancer       Date:  2021-09-02

3.  Metabolic Profiling Reveals a Dependency of Human Metastatic Breast Cancer on Mitochondrial Serine and One-Carbon Unit Metabolism.

Authors:  Albert M Li; Gregory S Ducker; Yang Li; Jose A Seoane; Yiren Xiao; Stavros Melemenidis; Yiren Zhou; Ling Liu; Sakari Vanharanta; Edward E Graves; Erinn B Rankin; Christina Curtis; Joan Massagué; Joshua D Rabinowitz; Craig B Thompson; Jiangbin Ye
Journal:  Mol Cancer Res       Date:  2020-01-15       Impact factor: 5.852

4.  Single-cell analyses reveal increased intratumoral heterogeneity after the onset of therapy resistance in small-cell lung cancer.

Authors:  C Allison Stewart; Carl M Gay; Yuanxin Xi; Santhosh Sivajothi; V Sivakamasundari; Junya Fujimoto; Mohan Bolisetty; Patrice M Hartsfield; Veerakumar Balasubramaniyan; Milind D Chalishazar; Cesar Moran; Neda Kalhor; John Stewart; Hai Tran; Stephen G Swisher; Jack A Roth; Jianjun Zhang; John de Groot; Bonnie Glisson; Trudy G Oliver; John V Heymach; Ignacio Wistuba; Paul Robson; Jing Wang; Lauren Averett Byers
Journal:  Nat Cancer       Date:  2020-02-17

5.  Gold-Based Pharmacophore Inhibits Intracellular MYC Protein.

Authors:  Samuel Ofori; Sailajah Gukathasan; Samuel G Awuah
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2021-02-01       Impact factor: 5.236

6.  Circulating Tumor Cells Exhibit Metastatic Tropism and Reveal Brain Metastasis Drivers.

Authors:  Amal Thomas; Teng Teng; Remi Klotz; Sung Min Han; Oihana Iriondo; Lin Li; Sara Restrepo-Vassalli; Alan Wang; Negeen Izadian; Matthew MacKay; Byoung-San Moon; Kevin J Liu; Sathish Kumar Ganesan; Grace Lee; Diane S Kang; Charlotte S Walmsley; Christopher Pinto; Michael F Press; Wange Lu; Janice Lu; Dejan Juric; Aditya Bardia; James Hicks; Bodour Salhia; Frank Attenello; Andrew D Smith; Min Yu
Journal:  Cancer Discov       Date:  2019-10-10       Impact factor: 38.272

7.  Spatial Arrangements of Connexin43 in Cancer Related Cells and Re-Arrangements under Treatment Conditions: Investigations on the Nano-Scale by Super-Resolution Localization Light Microscopy.

Authors:  Götz Pilarczyk; Franziska Papenfuß; Felix Bestvater; Michael Hausmann
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2019-03-04       Impact factor: 6.639

8.  Discovery of the first chemical tools to regulate MKK3-mediated MYC activation in cancer.

Authors:  Xuan Yang; Dacheng Fan; Aidan Henry Troha; Hyunjun Max Ahn; Kun Qian; Bo Liang; Yuhong Du; Haian Fu; Andrey A Ivanov
Journal:  Bioorg Med Chem       Date:  2021-07-22       Impact factor: 3.461

Review 9.  The roles of long noncoding RNAs in breast cancer metastasis.

Authors:  Lingxia Liu; Yu Zhang; Jun Lu
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2020-09-14       Impact factor: 8.469

10.  Protein Kinase D3 promotes the cell proliferation by activating the ERK1/c-MYC axis in breast cancer.

Authors:  Yan Liu; Hang Song; Shiyi Yu; Kuo-Hsiang Huang; Xinxing Ma; Yehui Zhou; Shuang Yu; Jingzhong Zhang; Liming Chen
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2020-01-16       Impact factor: 5.310

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