4.5 Article

Breast cancer cells can switch between estrogen receptor alpha and ErbB signaling and combined treatment against both signaling pathways postpones development of resistance

Journal

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT
Volume 121, Issue 3, Pages 601-613

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10549-009-0506-y

Keywords

Breast cancer; Treatment resistance; ER alpha; ErbB; Fulvestrant; CI-1033; Combined treatment

Categories

Funding

  1. Danish Cancer Society, Danish Agency for Science Technology and Innovation [271-07-0409]
  2. Beckett Foundation
  3. Mrs. Astrid Thaysen's Foundation for Basic Medical Research

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The majority of breast cancers are estrogen responsive, but upon progression of disease other growth promoting pathways are activated, e.g., the ErbB receptor system. The present study focuses on resistance to the pure estrogen antagonist fulvestrant and strategies to treat resistant cells or even circumvent development of resistance. Limited effects were observed when targeting EGFR and ErbB2 with the monoclonal antibodies cetuximab, trastuzumab, and pertuzumab, whereas the pan-ErbB inhibitor CI-1033 selectively inhibited growth of fulvestrant resistant cell lines. CI-1033 inhibited Erk but not Akt signaling, which as well as Erk is important for antiestrogen resistant cell growth. Accordingly, combination therapy with CI-1033 and the Akt inhibitor SH-6 or the Protein Kinase C inhibitor RO-32-0432 was applied and found superior to single agent treatment. Further, the resistant cell lines were more sensitive to CI-1033 treatment when grown in the presence of fulvestrant, as withdrawal of fulvestrant restored signaling through the estrogen receptor alpha (ER alpha), partly overcoming the growth inhibitory effects of CI-1033. Thus, the resistant cells could switch between ER alpha and ErbB signaling for growth promotion. Although parental MCF-7 cell growth primarily depends on ER alpha signaling, a heregulin-1 beta induced switch to ErbB signaling rescued MCF-7 cells from the growth inhibition exerted by fulvestrant-mediated blockade of ER alpha signaling. This interplay between ER alpha and ErbB signaling could be abrogated by combined therapy targeting both receptor systems. Thus, the present study indicates that upon development of antiestrogen resistance, antiestrogen treatment should be continued in combination with signal transduction inhibitors. Further, upfront combination of endocrine therapy with pan-ErbB inhibition may postpone or even prevent development of treatment resistance.

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