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Inhibition Lysosomal Degradation of Clusterin by Protein Kinase D3 Promotes Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Tumor Growth.
Liu, Yan; Zhou, Yehui; Ma, Xinxing; Chen, Liming.
Afiliação
  • Liu Y; The Key Laboratory of Bio-Medical Diagnostics Suzhou Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Technology Chinese Academy of Sciences Suzhou 215163 P. R. China.
  • Zhou Y; Cancer Institute Department of Biochemistry Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Molecular and Medical Biotechnology College of Life Science Nanjing Normal University Nanjing 210023 P. R. China.
  • Ma X; The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University Soochow University Suzhou 215006 P. R. China.
  • Chen L; The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University Soochow University Suzhou 215006 P. R. China.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 8(4): 2003205, 2021 Feb.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33643800
ABSTRACT
Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC), with its lack of targeted therapies, shows the worst mortality rate among all breast cancer subtypes. Clusterin (CLU) is implicated to play important oncogenic roles in cancer via promoting various downstream oncogenic pathways. Here, protein kinase D3 (PRKD3) is defined to be a key regulator of CLU in promoting TNBC tumor growth. Mechanically, PRKD3 with kinase activity binding to CLU is critical for CLU protein stability via inhibiting CLU's lysosomal distribution and degradation. CLU and PRKD3 protein level are significantly elevated and positively correlated in collected TNBC tumor samples. CLU silencer (OGX-011) and PRKDs inhibitor (CRT0066101) can both result in impressive tumor growth suppression in vitro and in vivo, suggesting targeting CLU and its key regulator-PRKD3 are promisingly efficient against TNBC. Finally, secreted CLU (sCLU) is found to be elevated in serums from TNBC patients and reduced in serum from TNBC murine models post OGX-011 and/or CRT0066101 treatment, suggesting serum sCLU is a promising blood-based biomarker for clinical management of TNBC. Taken together, this study provides a thorough molecular basis as well as preclinical evidences for targeting CLU pathway as a new promising strategy against TNBC via revealing PRKD3 as the key regulator of CLU in TNBC.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Article