LYN Is a Mediator of Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition and a Target of Dasatinib in Breast Cancer

Yoon‐La Choi(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Melanie Bocanegra(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Mi Kwon(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Young Kee Shin(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Seok Jin Nam(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Jung‐Hyun Yang(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Jessica Kao(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Andrew K. Godwin(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Jonathan R. Pollack(Fox Chase Cancer Center)
Cancer Research
March 9, 2010
Cited by 152Open Access
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Abstract

Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a switch of polarized epithelial cells to a migratory, fibroblastoid phenotype, is considered a key process driving tumor cell invasiveness and metastasis. Using breast cancer cell lines as a model system, we sought to discover gene expression signatures of EMT with clinical and mechanistic relevance. A supervised comparison of epithelial and mesenchymal breast cancer lines defined a 200-gene EMT signature that was prognostic across multiple breast cancer cohorts. The immunostaining of LYN, a top-ranked EMT signature gene and Src-family tyrosine kinase, was associated with significantly shorter overall survival (P = 0.02) and correlated with the basal-like ("triple-negative") phenotype. In mesenchymal breast cancer lines, RNAi-mediated knockdown of LYN inhibited cell migration and invasion, but not proliferation. Dasatinib, a dual-specificity tyrosine kinase inhibitor, also blocked invasion (but not proliferation) at nanomolar concentrations that inhibit LYN kinase activity, suggesting that LYN is a likely target and that invasion is a relevant end point for dasatinib therapy. Our findings define a prognostically relevant EMT signature in breast cancer and identify LYN as a mediator of invasion and a possible new therapeutic target (and theranostic marker for dasatinib response), with particular relevance to clinically aggressive basal-like breast cancer.


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