Autophagic Degradation of NBR1 Restricts Metastatic Outgrowth during Mammary Tumor Progression. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Although autophagy is being pursued as a therapeutic target in clinical oncology trials, its effects on metastasis, the principal cause of cancer mortality, remain unclear. Here, we utilize mammary cancer models to temporally delete essential autophagy regulators during carcinoma progression. Though genetic ablation of autophagy strongly attenuates primary mammary tumor growth, impaired autophagy promotes spontaneous metastasis and enables the outgrowth of disseminated tumor cells into overt macro-metastases. Transcriptomic analysis reveals that autophagy deficiency elicits a subpopulation of otherwise luminal tumor cells exhibiting basal differentiation traits, which is reversed upon preventing accumulation of the autophagy cargo receptor, Neighbor to BRCA1 (NBR1). Furthermore, pharmacological and genetic induction of autophagy suppresses pro-metastatic differentiation and metastatic outgrowth. Analysis of human breast cancer data reveal that autophagy gene expression inversely correlates with pro-metastatic differentiation signatures and predicts overall and distant metastasis-free survival. Overall, these findings highlight autophagy-dependent control of NBR1 as a key determinant of metastatic progression.

publication date

  • February 20, 2020

Research

keywords

  • Autophagy
  • Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
  • Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC7108946

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85080936860

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.devcel.2020.01.025

PubMed ID

  • 32084360

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 52

issue

  • 5