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Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ

NFκB is implicated in breast cancer bone metastasis and skeletal remodelling. However, the role of IKKβ, a key component of the canonical NFκB pathway, in the regulation of breast cancer osteolytic metastasis has not been investigated. Here, we describe the cancer-specific contribution of IKKβ to bo...

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Autores principales: Marino, Silvia, Bishop, Ryan T., Capulli, Mattia, Sophocleous, Antonia, Logan, John G, Mollat, Patrick, Mognetti, Barbara, Ventura, Luca, Sims, Andrew H., Rucci, Nadia, Ralston, Stuart H., Idris, Aymen I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5882323/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29662632
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24743
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author Marino, Silvia
Bishop, Ryan T.
Capulli, Mattia
Sophocleous, Antonia
Logan, John G
Mollat, Patrick
Mognetti, Barbara
Ventura, Luca
Sims, Andrew H.
Rucci, Nadia
Ralston, Stuart H.
Idris, Aymen I.
author_facet Marino, Silvia
Bishop, Ryan T.
Capulli, Mattia
Sophocleous, Antonia
Logan, John G
Mollat, Patrick
Mognetti, Barbara
Ventura, Luca
Sims, Andrew H.
Rucci, Nadia
Ralston, Stuart H.
Idris, Aymen I.
author_sort Marino, Silvia
collection PubMed
description NFκB is implicated in breast cancer bone metastasis and skeletal remodelling. However, the role of IKKβ, a key component of the canonical NFκB pathway, in the regulation of breast cancer osteolytic metastasis has not been investigated. Here, we describe the cancer-specific contribution of IKKβ to bone metastasis, skeletal tumour growth and osteolysis associated with breast cancer. IKKβ is highly expressed in invasive breast tumours and its level of expression was higher in patients with bone metastasis. IKKβ overexpression in parental MDA-MD-231 breast cancer cells, promoted mammary tumour growth but failed to convey osteolytic potential to these cells in mice. In contrast, IKKβ overexpression in osteotropic sub-clones of MDA-MB-231 cells with differing osteolytic phenotypes increased incidence of bone metastasis, exacerbated osteolysis and enhanced skeletal tumour growth, whereas its knockdown was inhibitory. Functional and mechanistic studies revealed that IKKβ enhanced the ability of osteotropic MDA-MB-231 cells to migrate, increase osteoclastogenesis, and to inhibit osteoblast differentiation via a mechanism mediated, at least in part, by cytoplasmic sequestering of FoxO3a and VEGFA production. Thus, tumour-selective manipulation of IKKβ and its interaction with FoxO3a may represent a novel strategy to reduce the development of secondary breast cancer in the skeleton.
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spelling pubmed-58823232018-04-16 Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ Marino, Silvia Bishop, Ryan T. Capulli, Mattia Sophocleous, Antonia Logan, John G Mollat, Patrick Mognetti, Barbara Ventura, Luca Sims, Andrew H. Rucci, Nadia Ralston, Stuart H. Idris, Aymen I. Oncotarget Research Paper NFκB is implicated in breast cancer bone metastasis and skeletal remodelling. However, the role of IKKβ, a key component of the canonical NFκB pathway, in the regulation of breast cancer osteolytic metastasis has not been investigated. Here, we describe the cancer-specific contribution of IKKβ to bone metastasis, skeletal tumour growth and osteolysis associated with breast cancer. IKKβ is highly expressed in invasive breast tumours and its level of expression was higher in patients with bone metastasis. IKKβ overexpression in parental MDA-MD-231 breast cancer cells, promoted mammary tumour growth but failed to convey osteolytic potential to these cells in mice. In contrast, IKKβ overexpression in osteotropic sub-clones of MDA-MB-231 cells with differing osteolytic phenotypes increased incidence of bone metastasis, exacerbated osteolysis and enhanced skeletal tumour growth, whereas its knockdown was inhibitory. Functional and mechanistic studies revealed that IKKβ enhanced the ability of osteotropic MDA-MB-231 cells to migrate, increase osteoclastogenesis, and to inhibit osteoblast differentiation via a mechanism mediated, at least in part, by cytoplasmic sequestering of FoxO3a and VEGFA production. Thus, tumour-selective manipulation of IKKβ and its interaction with FoxO3a may represent a novel strategy to reduce the development of secondary breast cancer in the skeleton. Impact Journals LLC 2018-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5882323/ /pubmed/29662632 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24743 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Marino et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Marino, Silvia
Bishop, Ryan T.
Capulli, Mattia
Sophocleous, Antonia
Logan, John G
Mollat, Patrick
Mognetti, Barbara
Ventura, Luca
Sims, Andrew H.
Rucci, Nadia
Ralston, Stuart H.
Idris, Aymen I.
Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ
title Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ
title_full Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ
title_fullStr Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ
title_full_unstemmed Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ
title_short Regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific IKKβ
title_sort regulation of breast cancer induced bone disease by cancer-specific ikkβ
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5882323/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29662632
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24743
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