AI Article Synopsis

  • Brain metastases from breast cancer significantly reduce patient life expectancy, particularly in cases involving alterations in EGFR, HER2 pathways, and the loss of PTEN expression.
  • PTEN loss occurs in nearly half of the analyzed samples and is notably more prevalent in triple-negative breast cancer, correlating with shorter survival times after surgery.
  • Overexpressing PTEN in brain-seeking cancer cells reduces tumor cell migration and invasion by affecting the AKT pathway and glial cell interactions, indicating a critical role of PTEN in the progression of brain metastases.

Article Abstract

Despite improvement of therapeutic treatments for breast cancer, the development of brain metastases has become a major limitation to life expectancy for many patients. Brain metastases show very commonly alterations in EGFR and HER2 driven pathways, of which PTEN is an important regulator. Here, we analyzed PTEN expression in 111 tissue samples of breast cancer brain metastases (BCBM). Loss of PTEN was found in a substantial proportion of BCBM samples (48.6%) and was significantly associated with triple-negative breast cancer (67.5%, p = 0.001) and a shorter survival time after surgical resection of brain metastases (p = 0.048). Overexpression of PTEN in brain-seeking MDA-MB-231 BR cells in vitro reduced activation of the AKT pathway, notably by suppression of Akt1 kinase activity. Furthermore, the migration of MDA-MB-231 BR cells in vitro was promoted by co-culturing with both astrocytes and microglial cells. Interestingly, when PTEN was overexpressed the migration was significantly inhibited. Moreover, in an ex vivo organotypic brain slice model, PTEN overexpression reduced invasion of tumor cells. This was accompanied by reduced astrocyte activation that was mediated by autocrine and paracrine activation of GM-CSF/ CSF2RA and AKT/ PTEN pathways. In conclusion, loss of PTEN is frequently detected in triple-negative BCBM patients and associated with poor prognosis. The findings of our functional studies suggest that PTEN loss promotes a feedback loop between tumor cells and glial cells, which might contribute to disease progression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5351620PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14047DOI Listing

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