Increased expression of the immunoproteasome subunits PSMB8 and PSMB9 by cancer cells correlate with better outcomes for triple-negative breast cancers

Karen Geoffroy(Occupational Cancer Research Centre), Bruna Araripe Saraiva(Occupational Cancer Research Centre), Mélissa Viens(Occupational Cancer Research Centre), Delphine Béland(Occupational Cancer Research Centre), Marie‐Claude Bourgeois‐Daigneault(Institute for Research in Immunology and Cancer)
Scientific Reports
February 6, 2023
Cited by 25Open Access
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Abstract

Proteasome dependency is a feature of many cancers that can be targeted by proteasome inhibitors. For some cancer types, notably breast cancer and triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), high mRNA expression of a modified form of the proteasome, called the immunoproteasome (ImP), correlates with better outcomes and higher expression of one ImP subunit was associated with slower tumor growth in a small patient cohort. While these findings are in line with an anti-tumoral role of the ImP in breast cancer, studies investigating ImP expression at the protein level in large patient cohorts are lacking. Furthermore, while ImPs can be found in both immune and non-immune cells, the cellular source is often ignored in correlative studies. In order to determine the impact of ImP expression on breast cancer outcomes, we assessed the protein expression and cellular source of the ImP subunits PSMB8 and PSMB9 in a cohort of 2070 patients. Our data show a clear correlation between high ImP expression and better outcomes, most notably for TNBC patients and when tumor cells rather than stromal or immune cells express PSMB8 or PSMB9. Our results therefore suggest that ImP expression by tumor cells could be used as prognostic markers of TNBC outcomes.


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