Cancer-Associated Exosomal CBFB Facilitates the Aggressive Phenotype, Evasion of Oxidative Stress, and Preferential Predisposition to Bone Prometastatic Factor of Breast Cancer Progression
Autor: | Chia-Hung Hsu, Hon-Ping Ma, Jiann Ruey Ong, Ming-Shou Hsieh, Vijesh Kumar Yadav, Chi-Tai Yeh, Tsu-Yi Chao, Wei-Hwa Lee, Wen-Chien Huang, Kuang-Tai Kuo, Iat-Hang Fong, Chih-Cheng Lin, Chih-Ming Su |
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Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: |
Article Subject
Biochemistry (medical) Clinical Biochemistry Bone Neoplasms Breast Neoplasms Core Binding Factor Alpha 1 Subunit General Medicine Core Binding Factor beta Subunit Mice Oxidative Stress Phenotype Cell Line Tumor Genetics Animals Humans Vimentin Female Molecular Biology Cell Proliferation |
Zdroj: | Disease Markers. 2022:1-16 |
ISSN: | 1875-8630 0278-0240 |
DOI: | 10.1155/2022/8446629 |
Popis: | Background. Despite therapeutic advancements, metastasis remains a major cause in breast cancer-specific mortality. Breast cancer cells are susceptible to oxidative damage and exhibit high levels of oxidative stress, including protein damage, DNA damage, and lipid peroxidation. Some breast cancer risk factors may change the level of endogenous oxidative stress. Circulating exosomes play critical roles in tumorigenesis, distant metastasis, and poor prognosis in patients with breast cancer. Methods. We used an online database to analyze the expression and prognostic value of core binding factor subunit β (CBFB) and oxidative stress–related targets in patients with breast cancer. Serum from healthy controls and patients with primary breast cancer or bone metastatic breast cancer in the bone was collected. Exosomes were isolated from the sera or cell culture media. We used an MDA-MB-436-innoculated tumor xenograft mouse model for silencing CBFB. Results. Circulating exosomes from patients with breast cancer metastasis to the bone were rich in CBFB. The human mammary fibroblast cells HMF3A and fibroblasts derived from patient samples cocultured with exosomes had increased α-SMA and vimentin expression and IL-6 and OPN secretion. Similarly, nonmetastatic breast cancer cells cocultured with exosomes exhibited increased levels of certain markers, including vimentin, snail1, CXCR4, and Runx2, and the exosomes had high CBFB expression. Silencing CBFB in metastatic MDA-MB-436 and MDA-MB-157 cells resulted in suppressed migration and invasion and downregulation of vimentin, CXCR4, snail1, Runx2, CD44, and OPN. Conversely, CBFB overexpression resulted in upregulation of Runx2, vimentin, snail1, CD44, and OPN in nonmetastatic T47D and MCF12A cells. The CBFB-rich exosomes derived from MDA-MB-436 cells induced enhanced metastatic phenotypes in the low-metastatic T47D and MCF12A cell lines. Conclusion. Our results revealed that CBFB may promote bone metastasis in patients with breast cancer. Of therapeutic relevance, targeting CBFB resulted in decreased tumor burden and bone metastasis, downregulation of bone metastasis markers, and impaired regulation of oxidative stress–related proteins NAE1 and NOS1. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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