Thirty percent of patients diagnosed with breast cancer ultimately develop metastatic disease and relapse in a process that can take years to decades. Tumor progression in the face of initially effective treatment represents a major clinical challenge. Tumor cells circumvent treatment via activation of adaptive and stress-induced signaling pathways. Metastasis and drug resistance occur in response to activation of a variety of stress-sensing signaling pathways whose cellular functions are orchestrated by the oxygen- responsive hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs). Yet, directly targeting HIFs is challenging as they are localized to the nucleus and regulate hundreds of genes. Most HIF inhibitors act indirectly rather than directly on HIF? stability/activity. To improve efficacy of treatments for breast cancr patients at risk of developing metastatic disease, driver genes acting downstream of HIFs must be identified and targeted. We have identified protein tyrosine kinase 6 (PTK6) as a major driver of oncogenic signaling in breast cancer. PTK6, also known as breast tumor kinase (Brk) is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase that is expressed in up to 86% of breast cancers but is very low or absent from normal breast tissues. Notably, increased PTK6 expression predicts poor outcome and mediates resistance to anti-cancer agents (ex. antibodies) aimed at cell-surface receptors. Forced expression of PTK6 confers hallmarks of cancer in vitro, including increased proliferation, pro-survival and migration. Recently, we found that PTK6 is rapidly upregulated in response to conditions that increase cellular stress and facilitate tumor progression, such as oxidative stress, low glucose, UV, and hypoxia. Robust PTK6 expression is also induced by corticosteroids, intracellular ligands for nuclear glucocorticoid receptors (GRs) and mediators of host stress responses. Notably, expression of GR is tightly associated with poor outcome in basal-type or triple-negative (ER-/PR-/Her2-) breast cancer (TNBC). TNBC cells also constitutively express high levels of HIF1? and HIF2?, transcription factor mediators of cellular responses to stress. Our most recent preliminary data suggest that GR/HIF complexes induce PTK6 in response to a variety of cellular stresses that may include chemotherapy. Once expressed, PTK6 activates the stress-associated protein kinases, p38 MAPK and ERK5, two emerging effectors of survival, chemo-resistance, EMT, and migratory/invasive behavior in breast cancer. These data collectively support a model in which cortisol/GR and/or tumor-associated stress mediate HIF-induced PTK6 expression, which then turns on stress-activated signaling pathways (p38 MAPK and ERK5), leading to increased cancer cell survival and the acquisition of migratory/invasive behaviors. In short, we hypothesize that inducible PTK6 confers chemo-resistance and metastatic behavior to tumor cells in vivo. Herein, we propose to define the requirements for PTK6 induction (Aim 1) and signal transduction (Aim 2) and test the role of PTK6 as a mediator of metastasis development and therapy-resistance in vivo using patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of TNBC (Aim 3).

Public Health Relevance

We have identified PTK6 as a driver of breast cancer progression to metastasis. PTK6 signaling is relevant to both hormone-dependent and hormone-independent breast cancers. Our studies will focus on triple negative breast cancer and address two clinical challenges. First, corticosteroids are commonly given to mitigate the inflammatory side effects of chemotherapy; these treatments may inadvertently induce PTK6 expression, leading to tumor cell survival and therapy resistance, thus causing patient harm. Second, treatments aimed at cell-surface receptors are often circumvented by induction and activation of downstream intracellular effectors such as PTK6, leading to acquisition of drug resistance and metastasis. Targeting inducible PTK6 expression or its function in signal transduction may lead to improved management and prolonged survival of patients with metastatic breast cancer, regardless of hormone receptor status.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01CA192178-01A1
Application #
8985870
Study Section
Tumor Cell Biology Study Section (TCB)
Program Officer
Sathyamoorthy, Neeraja
Project Start
2015-09-25
Project End
2020-08-31
Budget Start
2015-09-25
Budget End
2016-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
$445,155
Indirect Cost
$150,486
Name
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
555917996
City
Minneapolis
State
MN
Country
United States
Zip Code
55455
Regan Anderson, Tarah M; Ma, Shihong; Perez Kerkvliet, Carlos et al. (2018) Taxol Induces Brk-dependent Prosurvival Phenotypes in TNBC Cells through an AhR/GR/HIF-driven Signaling Axis. Mol Cancer Res 16:1761-1772
Regan Anderson, Tarah M; Ma, Shi Hong; Raj, Ganesh V et al. (2016) Breast Tumor Kinase (Brk/PTK6) Is Induced by HIF, Glucocorticoid Receptor, and PELP1-Mediated Stress Signaling in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer. Cancer Res 76:1653-63