| Literature DB >> 33616307 |
George Sflomos1, Laura Battista1, Patrick Aouad1, Fabio De Martino1, Valentina Scabia1, Athina Stravodimou2, Ayyakkannu Ayyanan1, Assia Ifticene-Treboux2, Philipp Bucher1, Maryse Fiche3,4, Giovanna Ambrosini1, Cathrin Brisken1.
Abstract
Invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) is the most frequent special histological subtype of breast cancer, typically characterized by loss of E-cadherin. It has clinical features distinct from other estrogen receptor-positive (ER+ ) breast cancers but the molecular mechanisms underlying its characteristic biology are poorly understood because we lack experimental models to study them. Here, we recapitulate the human disease, including its metastatic pattern, by grafting ILC-derived breast cancer cell lines, SUM-44 PE and MDA-MB-134-VI cells, into the mouse milk ducts. Using patient-derived intraductal xenografts from lobular and non-lobular ER+ HER2- tumors to compare global gene expression, we identify extracellular matrix modulation as a lobular carcinoma cell-intrinsic trait. Analysis of TCGA patient datasets shows matrisome signature is enriched in lobular carcinomas with overexpression of elastin, collagens, and the collagen modifying enzyme LOXL1. Treatment with the pan LOX inhibitor BAPN and silencing of LOXL1 expression decrease tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis by disrupting ECM structure resulting in decreased ER signaling. We conclude that LOXL1 inhibition is a promising therapeutic strategy for ILC.Entities:
Keywords: LOXL1; extracellular matrix; lobular carcinoma; preclinical models; xenografts
Year: 2021 PMID: 33616307 PMCID: PMC7933935 DOI: 10.15252/emmm.202013180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO Mol Med ISSN: 1757-4676 Impact factor: 12.137