| Literature DB >> 36077830 |
Ryan M Finnegan1,2, Ahmed M Elshazly2,3, Patricia V Schoenlein4, David A Gewirtz2.
Abstract
While endocrine therapy remains the mainstay of treatment for ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer, tumor progression and disease recurrence limit the utility of current standards of care. While existing therapies may allow for a prolonged progression-free survival, however, the growth-arrested (essentially dormant) state of residual tumor cells is not permanent and is frequently a precursor to disease relapse. Tumor cells that escape dormancy and regain proliferative capacity also tend to acquire resistance to further therapies. The cellular process of autophagy has been implicated in the adaptation, survival, and reactivation of dormant cells. Autophagy is a cellular stress mechanism induced to maintain cellular homeostasis. Tumor cells often undergo therapy-induced autophagy which, in most contexts, is cytoprotective in function; however, depending on how the autophagy is regulated, it can also be non-protective, cytostatic, or cytotoxic. In this review, we explore the literature on the relationship(s) between endocrine therapies and autophagy. Moreover, we address the different functional roles of autophagy in response to these treatments, exploring the possibility of targeting autophagy as an adjuvant therapeutic modality together with endocrine therapies.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; breast cancer; cytoprotective; endocrine; estrogen; resistance
Year: 2022 PMID: 36077830 PMCID: PMC9454809 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14174289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Primary mechanism of autophagy. When growth factors or nutrients become scarce, AMPK or mTOR inhibition results in activation of the ULK complex, which leads to phagophore initiation through mediation by the Beclin1 complex. The phagophore elongates and matures with the recruitment of ATG proteins, which contribute to the formation of the phosphatidylethanolamine (PE)-Conjugated LC3-II, which incorporates into the autophagosome membrane. After fusion with the lysosome, the autophagic cargo, comprising nutrients and metabolites, is degraded in the autolysosome and recycled back into the cytoplasm.
Figure 2The effects of endocrine therapies (SERDs, SERMs, and AIs) and CDK 4/6 inhibitors on the ER pathway and gene transcription. SERDs block ER function by binding to the complex, resulting in degradation of the ER, SERMs prevent ER function by binding to ER to inactivate the complex, while aromatase inhibitors block ER function by inhibiting the synthesis of estradiol. CDK4/6 inhibitors prevent cell cycle progression by blocking the formation of CDK4/6 and cyclin D complex, which leads to the inhibition of gene transcription.
Various functional roles of autophagy in response to endocrine therapies.
| Compound | Cancer Cell Line | Nature of Autophagy | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tamoxifen | MCF-7, T47D ER+, and HER2 overexpressing MCF7 (MCF7-HER2) cells | Cytoprotective | [ |
| MCF-7 and antiestrogen resistant MCF-7 cells | Cytoprotective | [ | |
| Antiestrogen resistant MCF-7/LCC9 cells | Cytoprotective | [ | |
| Parental MCF-7 and TAM-resistant MCF-7 (TAM-R) cell lines. | Autophagy genes upregulated in the resistant cells compared to the parent cells. | [ | |
| MCF-7 and antiestrogen resistant MCF-7/TAMR1 cells | Cytoprotective | [ | |
| Antiestrogen sensitive and resistant MCF-7 cells | Cytoprotective | [ | |
| Tamoxifen resistant and parental T-47D cells | Lysosomes are more resistant to LMP induced by tamoxifen in the resistant cells as compared to the parent cell line | [ | |
| Fulvestrant | MCF-7 and antiestrogen resistant MCF-7/LCC9 cells | Cytoprotective | [ |
| MCF-7 and antiestrogen resistant MCF-7/LCC9 cells | Cytoprotective in vitro | [ | |
| Fulvestrant resistant MCF-7 sublines | high levels of autophagy | [ | |
| Exemestane | Long-term estrogen deprived, aromatase overexpressing estrogen positive MCF-7 cells (LTEDaro ER+) | Cytoprotective | [ |
| Aromatase overexpressing MCF-7aro cell line | Cytoprotective with Exemestane | [ | |
| Palbociclib | MCF7 and T47D cell lines | Cytoprotective | [ |
| Palbociclib and letrozole | Aromatase-expressing MCF7 cell line | Mild cytoprotection | [ |
| Palbociclib and Fulvestrant | MCF-7 cell line | Mild cytoprotection | manuscript under review |