Many patients relapse over time despite initial response to systemic therapy. One explanation is that a rare sub-population of cancer stem cells with tumorigenic potential is intrinsically resistant to therapy. Consistent with this, we have shown for the first time clinically in human breast cancer patients that residual tumors after chemotherapy are 1) enriched for the tumorigenic CD44+/CD24-/low population, 2) show enhanced mammosphere-forming efficiency (MSFE), and 3) display an increase in outgrowths in xenograft transplants in immunocompromised SCID/Beige mice, thus suggesting their increased tumorigenicity. Our recent data from paired human breast cancer samples indicates that standard therapy eliminates dividing daughter cells, so that samples obtained after therapy are enriched for CD44+/CD24-/low putative """"""""breast cancer stem cells"""""""" that have the ability to self-renew in mammosphere cultures, and to give rise to tumors upon xenograft transplantation. We have identified a cancer stem cell signature of CD44+/CD24-/low mammosphere-forming cells derived from human breast cancer biopsies. The top canonical pathways identified include Notch and PI3-AKT, and other signaling pathways. We now propose a series of preclinical and clinical studies to directly test the hypothesis that breast cancer stem cells can be specifically targeted by inhibitors of the Notch, PI3-AKT and other pathways. A unique component of our studies is the availability of human biopsy samples obtained before and after targeted therapy in breast cancer patients with residual disease after preoperative (neoadjuvant) therapy.
Specific Aims and Study Design 1. To determine whether suppression of identified self-renewal and treatment resistance pathways can improve existing cancer therapies in preclinical models. Beginning with Notch and PI3-AKT inhibitors, we will determine if these will improve efficacy of conventional therapy, using MSFE and human breast cancer xenograft models. Next, we will target the top ~300 genes differentially expressed in our stem cell signature by ordered lentivirus-based shRNA libraries designed to allow genetic """"""""knockdown"""""""" of every gene in the human genome, as well as the development of high-throughput functional genomic assays of stem cell self-renewal. 2. To conduct novel clinical trials to determine whether suppressing stem cell self-renewal and treatment resistance pathways can improve existing cancer therapies in breast cancer patients. Clinical trials with novel inhibitors of stem cell self-renewal (Notch and PI3) have been planned. We propose to include patients with advanced breast cancers refractory to conventional therapy, as these women have a poor expected clinical outcome, and who are most likely to benefit from therapies targeting self-renewal pathways. 3. To perform correlative studies using breast cancer biopsy specimens from these clinical trials. Correlative studies using human cancer biopsies from these trials will be conducted, e.g. a decrease in stem cell markers and tumorigenic potential, as well as downstream effects of inhibition of the relevant pathways.

Public Health Relevance

We have shown that a subset of CD44+/CD24-/low breast cancer stem cells is intrinsically resistant to conventional therapy, and key signaling pathways present in this rare sub-class of cells include Notch and PI3-AKT. Targeting these critical pathways may eliminate the small subpopulation of cancer stem cells which possess self-renewal and tumor initiation properties, and may thereby prevent relapse and metastases. We now propose a series of preclinical and clinical studies to directly test the hypothesis that breast cancer stem cells can be specifically targeted by inhibitors of the Notch, PI3-AKT and other pathways, and are confident that these findings will translate into improved clinical outcome for women with breast cancer, even those with metastatic disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01CA138197-02
Application #
7691767
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-RPRB-O (O2))
Program Officer
Kagan, Jacob
Project Start
2008-09-30
Project End
2013-07-31
Budget Start
2009-08-01
Budget End
2010-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$478,509
Indirect Cost
Name
Baylor College of Medicine
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
051113330
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Liu, Yi; Choi, Dong Soon; Sheng, Jianting et al. (2018) HN1L Promotes Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Stem Cells through LEPR-STAT3 Pathway. Stem Cell Reports 10:212-227
Rosato, Roberto R; Dávila-González, Daniel; Choi, Dong Soon et al. (2018) Evaluation of anti-PD-1-based therapy against triple-negative breast cancer patient-derived xenograft tumors engrafted in humanized mouse models. Breast Cancer Res 20:108
Liang, Diana H; Choi, Dong Soon; Ensor, Joe E et al. (2016) The autophagy inhibitor chloroquine targets cancer stem cells in triple negative breast cancer by inducing mitochondrial damage and impairing DNA break repair. Cancer Lett 376:249-58
Tanei, Tomonori; Choi, Dong Soon; Rodriguez, Angel A et al. (2016) Antitumor activity of Cetuximab in combination with Ixabepilone on triple negative breast cancer stem cells. Breast Cancer Res 18:6
Granados-Principal, Sergio; Liu, Yi; Guevara, Maria L et al. (2015) Inhibition of iNOS as a novel effective targeted therapy against triple-negative breast cancer. Breast Cancer Res 17:25
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Choi, Dong Soon; Blanco, Elvin; Kim, Yoo-Shin et al. (2014) Chloroquine eliminates cancer stem cells through deregulation of Jak2 and DNMT1. Stem Cells 32:2309-23
Shen, Haifa; Mittal, Vivek; Ferrari, Mauro et al. (2013) Delivery of gene silencing agents for breast cancer therapy. Breast Cancer Res 15:205
Yu, Ke-Da; Zhu, Rui; Zhan, Ming et al. (2013) Identification of prognosis-relevant subgroups in patients with chemoresistant triple-negative breast cancer. Clin Cancer Res 19:2723-33

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