4.8 Article

TLR4 has a TP53-dependent dual role in regulating breast cancer cell growth

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1420811112

关键词

TLR4; breast cancer; TP53; microenvironment; IFN-gamma

资金

  1. Cancer Center Support Grant [5 P30 CA016672-38]
  2. Norman Brinker Award for Research Excellence
  3. John Charles Cain Distinguished Chair Award
  4. Mariam Rogers Fund for Breast/Women's Cancer Research
  5. University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center Halliburton Fellowship in Cancer Prevention Fund
  6. Susan G. Komen Promise Grant [KG081694]

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Breast cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related death, and it is important to understand pathways that drive the disease to devise effective therapeutic strategies. Our results show that Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) drives breast cancer cell growth differentially based on the presence of TP53, a tumor suppressor. TP53 is mutationally inactivated in most types of cancer and is mutated in 30-50% of diagnosed breast tumors. We demonstrate that TLR4 activation inhibits growth of TP53 wild-type cells, but promotes growth of TP53 mutant breast cancer cells by regulating proliferation. This differential effect is mediated by changes in tumor cell cytokine secretion. Whereas TLR4 activation in TP53 mutant breast cancer cells increases secretion of progrowth cytokines, TLR4 activation in TP53 wild-type breast cancer cells increases type I IFN (IFN-gamma) secretion, which is both necessary and sufficient for mediating TLR4-induced growth inhibition. This study identifies a novel dichotomous role for TLR4 as a growth regulator and a modulator of tumor microenvironment in breast tumors. These results have translational relevance, demonstrating that TP53 mutant breast tumor growth can be suppressed by pharmacologic TLR4 inhibition, whereas TLR4 inhibitors may in fact promote growth of TP53 wild-type tumors. Furthermore, using data generated by The Cancer Genome Atlas consortium, we demonstrate that the effect of TP53 mutational status on TLR4 activity may extend to ovarian, colon, and lung cancers, among others, suggesting that the viability of TLR4 as a therapeutic target depends on TP53 status in many different tumor types.

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