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Computational ranking-assisted identification of Plexin-B2 in homotypic and heterotypic clustering of circulating tumor cells in breast cancer metastasis

Authors :
Emma Schuster
Nurmaa Dashzeveg
Yuzhi Jia
Kibria Golam
Tong Zhang
Andrew Hoffman
Youbin Zhang
Chunlei Zheng
Erika Ramos
Rokana Taftaf
Lamiaa El- Shennawy
David Scholten
Reta B. Kitata
Valery Adorno-Cruz
Carolina Reduzzi
Sabina Spahija
Rong Xu
Kalliopi P. Siziopikou
Leonidas C. Platanias
Ami Shah
William J. Gradishar
Massimo Cristofanilli
Chia-Feng Tsai
Tujin Shi
Huiping Liu
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Metastasis is the cause of over 90% of all deaths associated with breast cancer, yet the strategies to predict cancer spreading based on primary tumor profiles and therefore prevent metastasis are egregiously limited. As rare precursor cells to metastasis, circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in multicellular clusters in the blood are 20-50 times more likely to produce viable metastasis than single CTCs. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying various CTC clusters, such as homotypic tumor cell clusters and heterotypic tumor-immune cell clusters, are yet to be fully elucidated. Combining machine learning-assisted computational ranking with experimental demonstration to assess cell adhesion candidates, we identified a transmembrane protein Plexin- B2 (PB2) as a new therapeutic target that drives the formation of both homotypic and heterotypic CTC clusters. High PB2 expression in human primary tumors predicts an unfavorable distant metastasis-free survival and is enriched in CTC clusters compared to single CTCs in advanced breast cancers. Loss of PB2 reduces formation of homotypic tumor cell clusters as well as heterotypic tumor-myeloid cell clusters in triple-negative breast cancer. Interactions between PB2 and its ligand Sema4C on tumor cells promote homotypic cluster formation, and PB2 binding with Sema4A on myeloid cells (monocytes) drives heterotypic CTC cluster formation, suggesting that metastasizing tumor cells hijack the PB2/Sema family axis to promote lung metastasis in breast cancer. Additionally, using a global proteomic analysis, we identified novel downstream effectors of the PB2 pathway associated with cancer stemness, cell cycling, and tumor cell clustering in breast cancer. Thus, PB2 is a novel therapeutic target for preventing new metastasis.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae09b094930ad48db74caacacc3e212f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.10.536233