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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Protein kinase D1 regulates matrix metalloproteinase expression and inhibits breast cancer cell invasion

TLDR
It is found that the serine/threonine kinase, PKD1, is highly expressed in ductal epithelial cells of normal human breast tissue, but is reduced in its expression in more than 95% of all analysed samples of human invasive breast tumours.
Abstract
The biological and molecular events that regulate the invasiveness of breast tumour cells need to be further revealed to develop effective therapies that stop breast cancer from expanding and metastasising. Human tissue samples of invasive breast cancer and normal breast, as well as breast cancer cell lines, were evaluated for protein kinase D (PKD) expression, to test if altered expression could serve as a marker for invasive breast cancer. We further utilised specific PKD1-shRNA and a system to inducibly-express PKD1 to analyse the role of PKD1 in the invasive behaviour of breast cancer cell lines in two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) culture. Invasive behaviour in breast cancer cell lines has been linked to matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), so we also determined if PKD1 regulates the expression and activity of these enzymes. We found that the serine/threonine kinase, PKD1, is highly expressed in ductal epithelial cells of normal human breast tissue, but is reduced in its expression in more than 95% of all analysed samples of human invasive breast tumours. Additionally, PKD1 is not expressed in highly invasive breast cancer cell lines, whereas non-invasive or very low-invasive breast cancer cell lines express PKD1. Our results further implicate that in MDA-MB-231 cells PKD1 expression is blocked by epigenetic silencing via DNA methylation. The re-expression of constitutively-active PKD1 in MDA-MB-231 cells drastically reduced their ability to invade in 2D and 3D cell culture. Moreover, MCF-7 cells acquired the ability to invade in 2D and 3D cell culture when PKD1 expression was knocked-down by shRNA. PKD1 also regulated the expression of breast cancer cell MMPs, MMP-2, MMP-7, MMP-9, MMP-10, MMP-11, MMP-13, MMP-14 and MMP-15, providing a potential mechanism for PKD1 mediation of the invasive phenotype. Our results identify decreased expression of the PKD1 as a marker for invasive breast cancer. They further suggest that the loss of PKD1 expression increases the malignant potential of breast cancer cells. This may be due to the function of PKD1 as a negative regulator of MMP expression. Our data suggest re-expression of PKD1 as a potential therapeutic strategy.

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The cofilin activity cycle in lamellipodia and invadopodia.

TL;DR: The existence of a common cofilin activity cycle in which both primary on/off regulation and inhibitory mechanisms are proposed are proposed, which are likely to be cell‐type dependent.
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Expression of Matrix Metalloproteinases (MMPs) in Primary Human Breast Cancer: MMP-9 as a Potential Biomarker for Cancer Invasion and Metastasis

TL;DR: Gene expression signatures are unique for specific grades and Overexpression of MMPs in higher grades might be associated with BC tumor invasion and metastasis, and MMP-9 is suggested to be of limited prognostic value.
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Cardiotoxicity associated with targeting kinase pathways in cancer.

TL;DR: Cardiotoxicity, also referred to as drug-induced cardiac injury, is an issue associated with the use of some small-molecule kinase inhibitors and antibody-based therapies targeting signaling pathways in cancer and laboratory investigations into the underlying molecular mechanisms of heart toxicity induced by these molecules have identified potentially common themes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular portraits of human breast tumours

TL;DR: Variation in gene expression patterns in a set of 65 surgical specimens of human breast tumours from 42 different individuals were characterized using complementary DNA microarrays representing 8,102 human genes, providing a distinctive molecular portrait of each tumour.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gene expression profiling predicts clinical outcome of breast cancer

TL;DR: DNA microarray analysis on primary breast tumours of 117 young patients is used and supervised classification is applied to identify a gene expression signature strongly predictive of a short interval to distant metastases (‘poor prognosis’ signature) in patients without tumour cells in local lymph nodes at diagnosis, providing a strategy to select patients who would benefit from adjuvant therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

New functions for the matrix metalloproteinases in cancer progression

TL;DR: It is shown that the MMPs have functions other than promotion of invasion, have substrates other than components of the extracellular matrix, and that they function before invasion in the development of cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genes that mediate breast cancer metastasis to lung

TL;DR: A set of genes are identified that marks and mediates breast cancer metastasis to the lungs and serve dual functions, providing growth advantages both in the primary tumour and in the lung microenvironment.
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