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Luminal breast cancer identity is determined by loss of glucocorticoid receptor activity

Authors :
Prekovic, Stefan
Chalkiadakis, Theofilos
Roest, Merel
Roden, Daniel
Lutz, Catrin
Schuurman, Karianne
Opdam, Mark
Hoekman, Liesbeth
Abbott, Nina
Tesselaar, Tanja
Wajahat, Maliha
Dwyer, Amy R.
Mayayo-Peralta, Isabel
Gomez, Gabriela
Altelaar, Maarten
Beijersbergen, Roderick
Győrffy, Balázs
Young, Leonie
Linn, Sabine
Jonkers, Jos
Tilley, Wayne
Hickey, Theresa
Vareslija, Damir
Swarbrick, Alexander
Zwart, Wilbert
Prekovic, Stefan
Chalkiadakis, Theofilos
Roest, Merel
Roden, Daniel
Lutz, Catrin
Schuurman, Karianne
Opdam, Mark
Hoekman, Liesbeth
Abbott, Nina
Tesselaar, Tanja
Wajahat, Maliha
Dwyer, Amy R.
Mayayo-Peralta, Isabel
Gomez, Gabriela
Altelaar, Maarten
Beijersbergen, Roderick
Győrffy, Balázs
Young, Leonie
Linn, Sabine
Jonkers, Jos
Tilley, Wayne
Hickey, Theresa
Vareslija, Damir
Swarbrick, Alexander
Zwart, Wilbert
Source :
EMBO Molecular Medicine vol.15 (2023) date: 2023-12-06 nr.12 [ISSN 1757-4676]
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is a transcription factor that plays a crucial role in cancer biology. In this study, we utilized an in silico-designed GR activity signature to demonstrate that GR relates to the proliferative capacity of numerous primary cancer types. In breast cancer, the GR activity status determines luminal subtype identity and has implications for patient outcomes. We reveal that GR engages with estrogen receptor (ER), leading to redistribution of ER on the chromatin. Notably, GR activation leads to upregulation of the ZBTB16 gene, encoding for a transcriptional repressor, which controls growth in ER-positive breast cancer and associates with prognosis in luminal A patients. In relation to ZBTB16's repressive nature, GR activation leads to epigenetic remodeling and loss of histone acetylation at sites proximal to cancer-driving genes. Based on these findings, epigenetic inhibitors reduce viability of ER-positive breast cancer cells that display absence of GR activity. Our findings provide insights into how GR controls ER-positive breast cancer growth and may have implications for patients' prognostication and provide novel therapeutic candidates for breast cancer treatment.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine vol.15 (2023) date: 2023-12-06 nr.12 [ISSN 1757-4676]
Notes :
DOI: 10.15252/emmm.202317737, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1445832172
Document Type :
Electronic Resource