| Literature DB >> 31537618 |
Isabelle Sirois1,2, Adriana Aguilar-Mahecha1, Josiane Lafleur1, Emma Fowler1,2, Viet Vu1, Michelle Scriver1, Marguerite Buchanan1, Catherine Chabot1, Aparna Ramanathan1, Banujan Balachandran1,2, Stéphanie Légaré1,2, Ewa Przybytkowski1, Cathy Lan1, Urszula Krzemien1, Luca Cavallone1, Olga Aleynikova1,3, Cristiano Ferrario1,3, Marie-Christine Guilbert4, Naciba Benlimame1, Amine Saad1,2,3, Moulay Alaoui-Jamali1,2,3, Horace Uri Saragovi5,6,7, Sylvia Josephy5,6,7, Ciara O'Flanagan8, Stephen D Hursting8,9, Vincent R Richard10, René P Zahedi10,11, Christoph H Borchers10,11,12, Eric Bareke13, Sheida Nabavi14, Peter Tonellato14, Josée-Anne Roy15, André Robidoux16, Elizabeth A Marcus17, Catalin Mihalcioiu18, Jacek Majewski13,19, Mark Basik20,2,3.
Abstract
The major obstacle in successfully treating triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is resistance to cytotoxic chemotherapy, the mainstay of treatment in this disease. Previous preclinical models of chemoresistance in TNBC have suffered from a lack of clinical relevance. Using a single high dose chemotherapy treatment, we developed a novel MDA-MB-436 cell-based model of chemoresistance characterized by a unique and complex morphologic phenotype, which consists of polyploid giant cancer cells giving rise to neuron-like mononuclear daughter cells filled with smaller but functional mitochondria and numerous lipid droplets. This resistant phenotype is associated with metabolic reprogramming with a shift to a greater dependence on fatty acids and oxidative phosphorylation. We validated both the molecular and histologic features of this model in a clinical cohort of primary chemoresistant TNBCs and identified several metabolic vulnerabilities including a dependence on PLIN4, a perilipin coating the observed lipid droplets, expressed both in the TNBC-resistant cells and clinical chemoresistant tumors treated with neoadjuvant doxorubicin-based chemotherapy. These findings thus reveal a novel mechanism of chemotherapy resistance that has therapeutic implications in the treatment of drug-resistant cancer. IMPLICATIONS: These findings underlie the importance of a novel morphologic-metabolic phenotype associated with chemotherapy resistance in TNBC, and bring to light novel therapeutic targets resulting from vulnerabilities in this phenotype, including the expression of PLIN4 essential for stabilizing lipid droplets in resistant cells. ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31537618 DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-19-0264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Res ISSN: 1541-7786 Impact factor: 5.852