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ANKRd44 gene silencing: a putative role in trastuzumab resistance in HER2-like breast cancer

Authors :
Marco La Ferla
Francesca Lessi
Paolo Aretini
Davide Pellegrini
Sara Franceschi
Elena Tantillo
Michele Menicagli
Ivo Marchetti
Claudia Scopelliti
Prospero Civita
Claudia De Angelis
Lucrezia Diodati
Ilaria Bertolini
Manuela Roncella
Liam A. McDonnell
Jacob Hochman
Marzia Del Re
Cristian Scatena
Antonio G. Naccarato
Andrea Fontana
Chiara M. Mazzanti
Roncella, Manuela
Civita, Prospero
Naccarato, Antonio G.
Tantillo, Elena
Franceschi, Sara
Aretini, Paolo
Hochman, Jacob
Scatena, Cristian
Lessi, Francesca
Menicagli, Michele
Pellegrini, Davide
Del Re, Marzia
De Angelis, Claudia
La Ferla, Marco
Diodati, Lucrezia
Bertolini, Ilaria
Mcdonnell, Liam A.
Scopelliti, Claudia
Marchetti, Ivo
Mazzanti, Chiara M.
Fontana, Andrea
Source :
Frontiers in Oncology, Frontiers in Oncology, Vol 9 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Frontiers Media, 2019.

Abstract

Trastuzumab is an effective therapeutic treatment for Her2-like breast cancer; despite this most of these tumors develop resistance to therapy due to specific gene mutations or alterations in gene expression. Understanding the mechanisms of resistance to Trastuzumab could be a useful tool in order to identify combinations of drugs that elude resistance and allow a better response for the treated patients. Twelve primary biopsies of Her2+/hormone receptor negative (ER-/PgR-) breast cancer patients were selected based on the specific response to neoadjuvant therapy with Trastuzumab and their whole exome was sequenced leading to the identification of 18 informative gene mutations that discriminate patients selectively based on response to treatment. Among these genes, we focused on the study of the ANKRD44 gene to understand its role in the mechanism of resistance to Trastuzumab. The ANKRD44 gene was silenced in Her2-like breast cancer cell line (BT474), obtaining a partially Trastuzumab-resistant breast cancer cell line that constitutively activates the NF-kb protein via the TAK1/AKT pathway. Following this activation an increase in the level of glycolysis in resistant cells is promoted, also confirmed by the up-regulation of the LDHB protein and by an increased TROP2 protein expression, found generally associated with aggressive tumors. These results allow us to consider the ANKRD44 gene as a potential gene involved in Trastuzumab resistance.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Oncology, Frontiers in Oncology, Vol 9 (2019)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f33111fba960546e632069bda2f2b0f