info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Halting ErbB-2 isoforms retrograde transport to the nucleus as a new theragnostic approach for triple-negative breast cancer
Date
2022Registration in:
Madera, Santiago; Izzo, Franco; Chervo, María Florencia; Dupont, Agustina; Chiauzzi, Violeta Alicia; et al.; Halting ErbB-2 isoforms retrograde transport to the nucleus as a new theragnostic approach for triple-negative breast cancer; Springer Nature; Cell Death and Disease; 13; 5; 2022; 1-14
2041-4889
2041-4889
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Author
Madera, Santiago
Izzo, Franco
Chervo, María Florencia
Dupont, Agustina
Chiauzzi, Violeta Alicia
Bruni, Sofia
Petrillo, Ezequiel
Merin, Sharon S.
de Martino, Mara
Montero, Diego
Levit, Claudio
Lebersztein, Gabriel
Anfuso, Fabiana
Roldán Deamicis, Agustina
Mercogliano, María Florencia
Proietti Anastasi, Cecilia Jazmín
Schillaci, Roxana
Elizalde, Patricia Virginia
Cordo Russo, Rosalia Ines
Abstract
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is clinically defined by the absence of estrogen and progesterone receptors and the lack of membrane overexpression or gene amplification of receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB-2/HER2. Due to TNBC heterogeneity, clinical biomarkers and targeted therapies for this disease remain elusive. We demonstrated that ErbB-2 is localized in the nucleus (NErbB-2) of TNBC cells and primary tumors, from where it drives growth. We also discovered that TNBC expresses both wild-type ErbB-2 (WTErbB-2) and alternative ErbB-2 isoform c (ErbB-2c). Here, we revealed that the inhibitors of the retrograde transport Retro-2 and its cyclic derivative Retro-2.1 evict both WTErbB-2 and ErbB-2c from the nucleus of BC cells and tumors. Using BC cells from several molecular subtypes, as well as normal breast cells, we demonstrated that Retro-2 specifically blocks proliferation of BC cells expressing NErbB-2. Importantly, Retro-2 eviction of both ErbB-2 isoforms from the nucleus resulted in a striking growth abrogation in multiple TNBC preclinical models, including tumor explants and xenografts. Our mechanistic studies in TNBC cells revealed that Retro-2 induces a differential accumulation of WTErbB-2 at the early endosomes and the plasma membrane, and of ErbB-2c at the Golgi, shedding new light both on Retro-2 action on endogenous protein cargoes undergoing retrograde transport, and on the biology of ErbB-2 splicing variants. In addition, we revealed that the presence of a functional signal peptide and a nuclear export signal (NES), both located at the N-terminus of WTErbB-2, and absent in ErbB-2c, accounts for the differential subcellular distribution of ErbB-2 isoforms upon Retro-2 treatment. Our present discoveries provide evidence for the rational repurposing of Retro-2 as a novel therapeutic agent for TNBC.