| Literature DB >> 31555644 |
Tara Fresques1, Arrianna Zirbes2,3, Sundus Shalabi2,3,4, Susan Samson5, Sandy Preto6, Martha R Stampfer1, Mark A LaBarge1,2,3.
Abstract
Preventing breast cancer before it is able to form is an ideal way to stop breast cancer. However, there are limited existing options for prevention of breast cancer. Changes in the breast tissue resulting from the aging process contribute to breast cancer susceptibility and progression and may therefore provide promising targets for prevention. Here, we describe new potential targets, immortalization and inflammaging, that may be useful for prevention of age-related breast cancers. We also summarize existing studies of warfarin and metformin, current drugs used for non-cancerous diseases, that also may be repurposed for breast cancer prevention.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; chemoprevention; immortality; inflammaging; metformin; prevention; warfarin
Year: 2019 PMID: 31555644 PMCID: PMC6722426 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2019.00174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Model of breast cancer progression and barriers for potential chemoprevention targets. Normal cells continue to divide in culture until they approach the stress-associated stasis barrier; cells can bypass stasis by functional inhibition of the retinoblastoma pathway. Post-stasis cells continue to divide until they approach the replicative senescence barrier, which results from ongoing telomere erosion producing telomere dysfunction and genomic instability. Reactivation of telomerase in post-stasis cells can confer immortality. Eroded telomeres, genomic instability, and telomerase reactivation similarly occur at the DCIS stage in vivo. Our research suggests that immortalization coincides with a cancer-unique re-structuring of telomere maintenance mechanisms. Immortalized cells are then resistant to oncogene induced senescence (OIS) and many oncogenes can cause them to become malignant. We propose that the immortalization barrier can be a valuable target for breast cancer prevention (starred).
FIGURE 2Proposal of a tissue-level mechanism of warfarin’s putative anti-breast cancer effects. In mammary epithelia Axl signaling allow cells with progenitor properties access to stem-cell gene programs; engagement with the GAS6 ligand maintains progenitors in an undifferentiated state. Warfarin inhibits gamma-carboxylation of the Axl ligand, GAS6, preventing it from remaining anchored in the plasma membrane and essentially converting GAS6 from an agonist to an Axl-antagonist. At that point the progenitors may differentiate into more terminal states. Because the epithelial progenitors are thought to comprise breast cancer cells of origin, it might be more advantageous to force them to differentiate before they become a liability.
FIGURE 3Potential molecular mechanisms of Metformin’s anti-cancer effects. Metformin inhibits complex 1 in the mitochondria thus reducing ATP production. Low levels of ATP activate AMPK which inhibits mTOR. Metformin improves peripheral tissue sensitivity to insulin and reduces insulin levels in the blood. Reduction of downstream signaling through the insulin receptor results in reduction of PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling as well as RAS/MAPK signaling leading to reduced cellular proliferation. Metformin also induces its cancer preventative effects via inhibiting IL6 mediated activation of JAK/Stat3 signaling involved in tumorigenesis.