| Literature DB >> 33086721 |
Adriana Papadimitropoulou1, Luciano Vellon2, Ella Atlas3,4, Travis Vander Steen5, Elisabet Cuyàs6,7, Sara Verdura6,7, Ingrid Espinoza8,9, Javier A Menendez6,7, Ruth Lupu4,10,11.
Abstract
Sustained HER2/HER3 signaling due to the overproduction of the HER3 ligand heregulin (HRG) is proposed as a key contributor to endocrine resistance in estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer. The molecular mechanisms linking HER2 transactivation by HRG-bound HER3 to the acquisition of a hormone-independent phenotype in ER+ breast cancer is, however, largely unknown. Here, we explored the possibility that autocrine HRG signaling drives cytokine-related endocrine resistance in ER+ breast cancer cells. We used human cytokine antibody arrays to semi-quantitatively measure the expression level of 60 cytokines and growth factors in the extracellular milieu of MCF-7 cells engineered to overexpress full-length HRGβ2 (MCF-7/HRG cells). Interleukin-8 (IL-8), a chemokine closely linked to ER inaction, emerged as one the most differentially expressed cytokines. Cytokine profiling using structural deletion mutants lacking both the N-terminus and the cytoplasmic-transmembrane region of HRGβ2-which is not secreted and cannot transactivate HER2-or lacking a nuclear localization signal at the N-terminus-which cannot localize at the nucleus but is actively secreted and transactivates HER2-revealed that the HRG-driven activation of IL-8 expression in ER+ cells required HRG secretion and transactivation of HER2 but not HRG nuclear localization. The functional blockade of IL-8 with a specific antibody inversely regulated ERα-driven transcriptional activation in endocrine-sensitive MCF-7 cells and endocrine-resistant MCF-7/HRG cells. Overall, these findings suggest that IL-8 participates in the HRG-driven endocrine resistance program in ER+/HER2- breast cancer and might illuminate a potential clinical setting for IL8- or CXCR1/2-neutralizing antibodies.Entities:
Keywords: IL-8; autocrine; cytokines; luminal; tamoxifen
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33086721 PMCID: PMC7589856 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21207737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Autocrine heregulin up-regulates IL-8 in luminal breast cancer cells. (A) Left. Schematic representation of the structural heregulin (HRG) mutants employed. Right. Forty-eight-hour conditioned media from MCF-7/pBABE, MCF-7/HRG, MCF-7/HRG-M1, and MCF-7/HRG-M4 cells were assayed for cytokine content as described in the “Materials and methods” section. Shown are representative results (n = 3) revealing conspicuous changes in uPAR, amphiregulin, and IL-8 secreted from MCF-7/HRG cells as compared with MCF-7/pBABE control counterparts. (B) IL-8 concentration in conditioned media from MCF-7/pBABE, MCF-7/HRG, MCF-7/HRG-M1, and MCF-7/HRG-M4 cells was assessed by ELISA. Values represent mean (columns) ± S.D. (bars) from three independent experiments. (** p < 0.005; n.s. not statistically significant).
Figure 2(A) HRG- and HER2-induced cytokine signatures are similar but not identical. Left. Forty-eight-hour conditioned media from MCF-7/neo and MCF-7/Her2-18 cells were assayed for cytokine content as described in the “Materials and methods” section. Shown are representative results (n = 3) revealing conspicuous changes in TIMP-2, uPAR, VEGF, amphiregulin, GRO, and IL-8 secreted from MCF-7/Her2-18 cells as compared with MCF-7/neo control counterparts. Right. IL-8 concentration in conditioned media from MCF-7/neo and MCF-7/Her2-18 cells was assessed by ELISA. Values represent mean (columns) ± S.D. (bars) from three independent experiments. (** p < 0.005). (B) Suppression of HRG overexpression is not sufficient to down-regulate IL-8 overexpression in ER-negative breast cancer cells. Forty-eight-hour conditioned media from HRG-/IL8-overexpressing MDA-MB-231/AS-V cells and the HRG-negative MDA-MB-231/AS-31 clone were assayed for cytokine content as described in the “Materials and methods” section. Shown are representative results (n = 3) revealing conspicuous changes in TIMP-2, uPAR, VEGF, and IL-8 secreted from MDA-MB-231/AS-31 cells as compared with MDA-MB-231/AS-V control counterparts. IL-8 concentration in conditioned media from MCF-7, MDA-MB-231/AS-V, and MDA-MB-231/AS-31 cells was assessed by ELISA. Values represent mean (columns) ± S.D. (bars) from three independent experiments. (* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.005).
Figure 3Blockade of IL-8 bioactivity differentially regulates ERα-driven transcriptional activity in an HRG-dependent manner. (A) MCF-7/pBABE (top) and MCF-7/HRG (bottom) cells were transiently co-transfected with an ERE-Luciferase reporter (the ERE-containing reporter plasmid) and pRL/CMV (an internal reporter plasmid to control for transfection efficiency). Cells were incubated for 24 h in the absence or presence of vehicles (control), E2 and anti-IL-8 antibody individually or in the combinations specified, and cell extracts were analyzed for Luciferase activity. Data shown represent mean (columns) ± S.D. (bars) (n = 3). (B) E2-independent and E2-induced ER transcriptional activity following normalization intra- (top) and inter-normalization (bottom) to the activity of pRL-CMV (1.0-fold). (* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.005)
Figure 4IL-8 participates in the HRG-driven endocrine resistance program in ER+ breast cancer cells. The regulatory actions of IL-8 on ER signaling can be related to the HER2:HER3-regulated stage of endocrine responsiveness. In the absence of persistent HER2:HER3 signaling, IL-8 expression might be part of a negative-feedback regulatory mechanism to fine-tune ER signaling. Accordingly, blockade of such negative feedback leads to exacerbated ERα transcriptional activation in response to E2. Autocrine HRG-induced heterodimerization and activation of HER2/HER3 stimulate the up-regulation of IL-8 expression and secretion, which in turn might further potentiate the non-genomic (e.g., MAPK- and PI3K-driven) unliganded transcriptional activity of ER characteristic of the endocrine-resistant phenotype in ER+ breast cancer cells.