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1.
NPJ Breast Cancer ; 10(1): 65, 2024 Jul 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39075068

RESUMO

Therapeutic resistance presents a significant hurdle in combating inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), adding to the complexity of its management. To investigate these mechanisms, we conducted a comprehensive analysis using transcriptomic and proteomic profiling in a preclinical model alone with correlates of treatment response in IBC patients. This included SUM149 cell lines derived from treatment-naïve patients, along with acquired drug resistance (rSUM149) and others in a state of resistance reversal (rrSUM149), aiming to uncover drug resistance networks. We identified specific ribosomal proteins associated with acquiring resistance. These correlated with elevated levels of molecular markers such as pERK, CDK1, XIAP, and SOD2. While resistance reversal in rrSUM149 cells largely normalized the expression profile, VIPER analysis revealed persistent alterations in ribosomal process-related proteins (AGO2, Exportin 1, RPL5), suggesting their continued involvement in drug resistance. Moreover, genes linked to ribosomal processes were significantly enriched (P < 0.001) among overexpressed genes in IBC patients (n = 87) who exhibited a pathological complete response (pCR) to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Given the common hyperactivation of MAPK in IBC tumors, including rSUM149, we evaluated Merestinib, a multikinase inhibitor in clinical trials. It effectively targeted pERK and peIF4E pathways, suppressed downstream targets, induced cell death in drug-resistant rSUM149 cells, and showed synergistic effects with another tyrosine kinase inhibitor (Lapatinib) in parental cells. This underscores its significant impact on protein synthesis signaling, crucial for combating translational dependence in cancer cells. In summary, our study elucidates adaptive changes in IBC cells in response to therapy and treatment pauses, guiding precision medicine approaches for this challenging cancer type.

2.
Cancers (Basel) ; 15(8)2023 Apr 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37190189

RESUMO

Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), an understudied and lethal breast cancer, is often misdiagnosed due to its unique presentation of diffuse tumor cell clusters in the skin and dermal lymphatics. Here, we describe a window chamber technique in combination with a novel transgenic mouse model that has red fluorescent lymphatics (ProxTom RFP Nu/Nu) to simulate IBC clinicopathological hallmarks. Various breast cancer cells stably transfected to express green or red fluorescent reporters were transplanted into mice bearing dorsal skinfold window chambers. Intravital fluorescence microscopy and the in vivo imaging system (IVIS) were used to serially quantify local tumor growth, motility, length density of lymph and blood vessels, and degree of tumor cell lymphatic invasion over 0-140 h. This short-term, longitudinal imaging time frame in studying transient or dynamic events of diffuse and collectively migrating tumor cells in the local environment and quantitative analysis of the tumor area, motility, and vessel characteristics can be expanded to investigate other cancer cell types exhibiting lymphovascular invasion, a key step in metastatic dissemination. It was found that these models were able to effectively track tumor cluster migration and dissemination, which is a hallmark of IBC clinically, and was recapitulated in these mouse models.

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