LYN is a mediator of epithelial-mesenchymal transition and a target of dasatinib in breast cancer

YL Choi, M Bocanegra, MJ Kwon, YK Shin, SJ Nam… - Cancer research, 2010 - AACR
YL Choi, M Bocanegra, MJ Kwon, YK Shin, SJ Nam, JH Yang, J Kao, AK Godwin, JR Pollack
Cancer research, 2010AACR
Abstract Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a switch of polarized epithelial cells to a
migratory, fibroblastoid phenotype, is considered a key process driving tumor cell
invasiveness and metastasis. Using breast cancer cell lines as a model system, we sought
to discover gene expression signatures of EMT with clinical and mechanistic relevance. A
supervised comparison of epithelial and mesenchymal breast cancer lines defined a 200-
gene EMT signature that was prognostic across multiple breast cancer cohorts. The …
Abstract
Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a switch of polarized epithelial cells to a migratory, fibroblastoid phenotype, is considered a key process driving tumor cell invasiveness and metastasis. Using breast cancer cell lines as a model system, we sought to discover gene expression signatures of EMT with clinical and mechanistic relevance. A supervised comparison of epithelial and mesenchymal breast cancer lines defined a 200-gene EMT signature that was prognostic across multiple breast cancer cohorts. The immunostaining of LYN, a top-ranked EMT signature gene and Src-family tyrosine kinase, was associated with significantly shorter overall survival (P = 0.02) and correlated with the basal-like (“triple-negative”) phenotype. In mesenchymal breast cancer lines, RNAi-mediated knockdown of LYN inhibited cell migration and invasion, but not proliferation. Dasatinib, a dual-specificity tyrosine kinase inhibitor, also blocked invasion (but not proliferation) at nanomolar concentrations that inhibit LYN kinase activity, suggesting that LYN is a likely target and that invasion is a relevant end point for dasatinib therapy. Our findings define a prognostically relevant EMT signature in breast cancer and identify LYN as a mediator of invasion and a possible new therapeutic target (and theranostic marker for dasatinib response), with particular relevance to clinically aggressive basal-like breast cancer. Cancer Res; 70(6); 2296–306
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