4.3 Article

Combined inhibition of EGFR and c-ABL suppresses the growth of triple-negative breast cancer growth through inhibition of HOTAIR

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 13, Pages 11150-11161

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.3441

Keywords

EGFR; c-ABL; lncRNA; b-catenin; breast cancer

Funding

  1. Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Research Award [KG080540]
  2. Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Research Program [PC073951]
  3. Elsa Pardee Foundation
  4. University of Cincinnati Provost's Pilot Project Award
  5. Cincinnati Cancer Center Affinity Pilot grant
  6. NIH [T32CA117846]
  7. National Center for Research Resources
  8. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of NIH [8UL1 TR000077-05]

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Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) does not express conventional therapeutic targets and is the only type of malignant breast cancer for which no designated FDA-approved targeted therapy is available. Although overexpression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is frequently found in TNBC, the therapeutic effect of EGFR inhibitors in TNBC has been underwhelming. Here we show that co-treatment with clinically validated inhibitors of c-ABL (imatinib) and EGFR (lapatinib) results in synergistic growth inhibition in TNBC cells. The dual treatment leads to synergistic repression of the long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) HOTAIR (HOX Antisense Intergenic RNA). HOTAIR has been known to induce tumor growth and metastasis in breast cancer. Depleting HOTAIR alone phenocopies the dual treatment in growth suppression. We show that expression of HOTAIR is regulated by beta-catenin through a LEF1/TCF4-binding site. The dual treatment blocks nuclear expression of beta-catenin and prevents its recruitment to the HOTAIR promoter. Consistently, forced expression of beta-catenin rescued HOTAIR expression and cell viability in the presence of both drugs. Upregulation of HOTAIR is associated with TNBC in cell lines and a cohort of primary tumors. This study elucidates a previously unidentified mechanism in TNBC linking signaling with lncRNA regulation which may be exploited for therapeutic gain.

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