Bibliographic Details
Title: |
The splicing machinery is dysregulated and represents a therapeutic vulnerability in breast cancer. |
Authors: |
Hermán-Sánchez, Natalia, G-García, Miguel E., Jiménez-Vacas, Juan M., Yubero-Serrano, Elena M., López-Sánchez, Laura M., Romero-Martín, Sara, Raya-Povedano, Jose L., Álvarez-Benito, Marina, Castaño, Justo P., Luque, Raúl M., Gahete, Manuel D. |
Source: |
Cellular & Molecular Life Sciences; 12/27/2024, Vol. 82 Issue 1, p1-16, 16p |
Subject Terms: |
MEDICAL sciences, HORMONE receptors, OVERALL survival, BREAST cancer, CELL lines, RNA splicing, BREAST |
Abstract: |
Breast cancer (BCa) is a highly prevalent pathological condition (̴30% in women) with limited and subtype-dependent prognosis and therapeutic options. Therefore, BCa management might benefit from the identification of novel molecular elements with clinical potential. Since splicing process is gaining a great relevance in cancer, this work analysed the expression of multiple Spliceosome Components (SCs = 17) and Splicing Factors (SFs = 26) and found a drastic dysregulation in BCa (n = 69) vs. control (negative biopsies; n = 50) samples. Among all the components analysed, we highlight the upregulation of ESRP1 and down-regulation of PRPF8 and NOVA1 in BCa vs. control samples. Indeed, ESRP1 was specially overexpressed in triple-negative BCa (TNBCa) and associated with worse prognosis (i.e., higher BCa grade and lower overall survival), suggesting an association of ESRP1 with BCa aggressiveness. On the other hand, PRPF8 expression was generally downregulated in BCa with no associations to clinical characteristics, while NOVA1 expression was lower in TNBCa patients and highly aggressive tumours. Consistently, NOVA1 overexpression in vitro reduced functional parameters of aggressiveness in ER-/PR- cell lines (MDA-MB-231 and BT-549) but not in ER+/PR+ cells (MCF7), suggesting a critical role of NOVA1 in subtype-specific BCa. Finally, the in vitro pharmacological inhibition of splicing machinery using pladienolide B decreased aggressiveness features in all the BCa cell lines, showing a subtype-independent inhibitory potential, but being relatively innocuous in normal-like breast cells. These results demonstrate the profound dysregulation of the splicing machinery in BCa and their potential as source of promising diagnosis/prognosis markers, as well as valuable therapeutic targets for BCa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
|
Copyright of Cellular & Molecular Life Sciences is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.) |
Database: |
Complementary Index |