Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Mayo Clinic School of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Int J Oncol. 2010 Nov;37(5):1167-76. doi: 10.3892/ijo_00000768.
Development of chromosomal instability (CIN) and consequent phenotypic heterogeneity represent common events during breast cancer progression. Breast carcinomas harboring extensive chromosomal aberrations display a more aggressive behavior characterized by chemoresistance and the propensity to give rise to distant metastases. The tumor suppressor p53 plays a key role in the maintenance of chromosomal stability and tissue homeostasis through activation of cell cycle checkpoints following DNA damage and control of centrosome duplication that ensures equal chromosome segregation during cell division. Furthermore, p53 suppresses CD44 expression and the acquisition of stem cell-like properties responsible for epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) and metastasis. In this study we employed MCF-7 breast cancer cells with endogenous wild-type p53, an engineered MCF-7 variant (vMCF-7(DNP53)) overexpressing a dominant negative p53val135 mutant, and cells re-cultured from vMCF-7(DNP53) tumor xenografts. We carried out an integrative transcriptome and cytogenetic analysis to characterize the mechanistic linkage between loss of p53 function, EMT and consequent establishment of invasive gene signatures during breast cancer progression. We demonstrate that abrogation of p53 function drives the early transcriptome changes responsible for cell proliferation, EMT and survival, while further transcriptome changes that occur during in vivo tumor progression are mechanistically linked to the development of CIN leading to a more invasive and metastatic breast cancer phenotype. Here we identified distinct novel non-canonical transcriptome networks involved in cell proliferation, EMT, chemoresistance and invasion that arise following abrogation of p53 function in vitro and development of CIN in vivo. These studies also have important translational implications since some of the nodal genes identified here are 'druggable' making them appropriate molecular targets for the treatment of breast carcinomas displaying mutant p53, EMT, CIN and high metastatic potential.
染色体不稳定性 (CIN) 的发展和随后的表型异质性是乳腺癌进展过程中的常见事件。广泛染色体畸变的乳腺癌表现出更具侵袭性的行为,其特征是化疗耐药和产生远处转移的倾向。肿瘤抑制因子 p53 通过在 DNA 损伤后激活细胞周期检查点和控制中心体复制来维持染色体稳定性和组织内稳态,从而确保细胞分裂过程中染色体的均等分离。此外,p53 抑制 CD44 表达和获得负责上皮间质转化 (EMT) 和转移的干细胞样特性。在这项研究中,我们使用了内源性野生型 p53 的 MCF-7 乳腺癌细胞、过表达显性负 p53val135 突变体的工程 MCF-7 变体 (vMCF-7(DNP53)) 以及从 vMCF-7(DNP53)肿瘤异种移植中重新培养的细胞。我们进行了综合转录组和细胞遗传学分析,以表征在乳腺癌进展过程中,p53 功能丧失、EMT 和随后建立侵袭性基因特征之间的机制联系。我们证明,p53 功能的丧失会导致早期转录组发生变化,这些变化负责细胞增殖、EMT 和存活,而在体内肿瘤进展过程中发生的进一步转录组变化与 CIN 的发展具有机制联系,导致更具侵袭性和转移性的乳腺癌表型。在这里,我们确定了一些独特的新非典型转录组网络,这些网络涉及细胞增殖、EMT、化疗耐药和侵袭,这些网络在体外 p53 功能丧失和体内 CIN 发展后出现。这些研究还具有重要的转化意义,因为这里确定的一些节点基因是“可用药”的,使它们成为治疗显示突变型 p53、EMT、CIN 和高转移潜能的乳腺癌的合适分子靶点。