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Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Acquired resistance to antiestrogenic therapy remains the major obstacle to curing luminal subtype breast cancer. While current treatment in acquired endocrine-resistant settings includes combined therapy with receptor tyrosine kinase or cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, progressio...

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Autores principales: Direito, Inês, Monteiro, Liliana, Melo, Tânia, Figueira, Daniela, Lobo, João, Enes, Vera, Moura, Gabriela, Henrique, Rui, Santos, Manuel A. S., Jerónimo, Carmen, Amado, Francisco, Fardilha, Margarida, Helguero, Luisa A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8269126/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34206811
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13133195
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author Direito, Inês
Monteiro, Liliana
Melo, Tânia
Figueira, Daniela
Lobo, João
Enes, Vera
Moura, Gabriela
Henrique, Rui
Santos, Manuel A. S.
Jerónimo, Carmen
Amado, Francisco
Fardilha, Margarida
Helguero, Luisa A.
author_facet Direito, Inês
Monteiro, Liliana
Melo, Tânia
Figueira, Daniela
Lobo, João
Enes, Vera
Moura, Gabriela
Henrique, Rui
Santos, Manuel A. S.
Jerónimo, Carmen
Amado, Francisco
Fardilha, Margarida
Helguero, Luisa A.
author_sort Direito, Inês
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Acquired resistance to antiestrogenic therapy remains the major obstacle to curing luminal subtype breast cancer. While current treatment in acquired endocrine-resistant settings includes combined therapy with receptor tyrosine kinase or cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, progression to incurable disease remains possible. In recent years, the antioxidant system and the protein quality control network have been associated with the enhanced resistance of breast cancer cells to hormonal therapy. In this work, we raise the hypothesis that antiestrogen treatment induces the accumulation of protein aggregates in sensitive cells, which in turn could hinder the activation of survival pathways. We present evidence concerning a novel way to identify antiestrogen response and disclose a novel protein, RTBC, that controls acquired antiestrogen resistance. This work opens a new avenue for research towards finding breast cancer prognostic markers and therapeutic targets, where the identification of proteins prone to aggregate could help to identify antiestrogen response and understand mechanisms of disease. ABSTRACT: The protein quality control network, including autophagy, the proteasome and the unfolded protein response (UPR), is triggered by stress and is overactive in acquired antiestrogen therapy resistance. We show for the first time that the aggresome load correlates with apoptosis and is increased in antiestrogen-sensitive cells compared to endocrine-resistant variants. LC-MS/MS analysis of the aggregated proteins obtained after 4OH-tamoxifen and Fulvestrant treatment identified proteins with essential function in protein quality control in antiestrogen-sensitive cells, but not in resistant variants. These include the UPR modulators RTCB and PDIA6, as well as many proteasome proteins such as PSMC2 and PSMD11. RTCB is a tRNA and XBP1 ligase and its aggregation induced by antiestrogens correlated with impaired XBP1s expression in sensitive cells. Knock down of RTCB was sufficient to restore sensitivity to tamoxifen in endocrine-resistant cells and increased the formation of aggresomes, leading to apoptotic cell death. Analysis of primary human breast cancer samples and their metastases appearing after endocrine treatment showed that RTCB is only localized to aggresomes in the primary tumors, while total aggresomes, including aggregated RTCB, were significantly reduced in the metastases. Therefore, different protein aggregation patterns may indicate loss of function of essential proteins resulting in enhanced protein aggregation that can be used to identify antiestrogen-resistant breast cancer cells and improve the response to antiestrogenic therapy.
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spelling pubmed-82691262021-07-10 Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance Direito, Inês Monteiro, Liliana Melo, Tânia Figueira, Daniela Lobo, João Enes, Vera Moura, Gabriela Henrique, Rui Santos, Manuel A. S. Jerónimo, Carmen Amado, Francisco Fardilha, Margarida Helguero, Luisa A. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Acquired resistance to antiestrogenic therapy remains the major obstacle to curing luminal subtype breast cancer. While current treatment in acquired endocrine-resistant settings includes combined therapy with receptor tyrosine kinase or cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, progression to incurable disease remains possible. In recent years, the antioxidant system and the protein quality control network have been associated with the enhanced resistance of breast cancer cells to hormonal therapy. In this work, we raise the hypothesis that antiestrogen treatment induces the accumulation of protein aggregates in sensitive cells, which in turn could hinder the activation of survival pathways. We present evidence concerning a novel way to identify antiestrogen response and disclose a novel protein, RTBC, that controls acquired antiestrogen resistance. This work opens a new avenue for research towards finding breast cancer prognostic markers and therapeutic targets, where the identification of proteins prone to aggregate could help to identify antiestrogen response and understand mechanisms of disease. ABSTRACT: The protein quality control network, including autophagy, the proteasome and the unfolded protein response (UPR), is triggered by stress and is overactive in acquired antiestrogen therapy resistance. We show for the first time that the aggresome load correlates with apoptosis and is increased in antiestrogen-sensitive cells compared to endocrine-resistant variants. LC-MS/MS analysis of the aggregated proteins obtained after 4OH-tamoxifen and Fulvestrant treatment identified proteins with essential function in protein quality control in antiestrogen-sensitive cells, but not in resistant variants. These include the UPR modulators RTCB and PDIA6, as well as many proteasome proteins such as PSMC2 and PSMD11. RTCB is a tRNA and XBP1 ligase and its aggregation induced by antiestrogens correlated with impaired XBP1s expression in sensitive cells. Knock down of RTCB was sufficient to restore sensitivity to tamoxifen in endocrine-resistant cells and increased the formation of aggresomes, leading to apoptotic cell death. Analysis of primary human breast cancer samples and their metastases appearing after endocrine treatment showed that RTCB is only localized to aggresomes in the primary tumors, while total aggresomes, including aggregated RTCB, were significantly reduced in the metastases. Therefore, different protein aggregation patterns may indicate loss of function of essential proteins resulting in enhanced protein aggregation that can be used to identify antiestrogen-resistant breast cancer cells and improve the response to antiestrogenic therapy. MDPI 2021-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8269126/ /pubmed/34206811 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13133195 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Direito, Inês
Monteiro, Liliana
Melo, Tânia
Figueira, Daniela
Lobo, João
Enes, Vera
Moura, Gabriela
Henrique, Rui
Santos, Manuel A. S.
Jerónimo, Carmen
Amado, Francisco
Fardilha, Margarida
Helguero, Luisa A.
Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance
title Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance
title_full Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance
title_fullStr Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance
title_full_unstemmed Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance
title_short Protein Aggregation Patterns Inform about Breast Cancer Response to Antiestrogens and Reveal the RNA Ligase RTCB as Mediator of Acquired Tamoxifen Resistance
title_sort protein aggregation patterns inform about breast cancer response to antiestrogens and reveal the rna ligase rtcb as mediator of acquired tamoxifen resistance
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8269126/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34206811
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13133195
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