Cancers (Jul 2021)

Emerging Insights into Keratin 16 Expression during Metastatic Progression of Breast Cancer

  • Maha Elazezy,
  • Sandra Schwentesius,
  • Luisa Stegat,
  • Harriet Wikman,
  • Stefan Werner,
  • Wael Y. Mansour,
  • Antonio Virgilio Failla,
  • Sven Peine,
  • Volkmar Müller,
  • Jean Paul Thiery,
  • Majid Ebrahimi Warkiani,
  • Klaus Pantel,
  • Simon A. Joosse

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13153869
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 15
p. 3869

Abstract

Read online

Keratins are the main identification markers of circulating tumor cells (CTCs); however, whether their deregulation is associated with the metastatic process is largely unknown. Previously we have shown by in silico analysis that keratin 16 (KRT16) mRNA upregulation might be associated with more aggressive cancer. Therefore, in this study, we investigated the biological role and the clinical relevance of K16 in metastatic breast cancer. By performing RT-qPCR, western blot, and immunocytochemistry, we investigated the expression patterns of K16 in metastatic breast cancer cell lines and evaluated the clinical relevance of K16 expression in CTCs of 20 metastatic breast cancer patients. High K16 protein expression was associated with an intermediate mesenchymal phenotype. Functional studies showed that K16 has a regulatory effect on EMT and overexpression of K16 significantly enhanced cell motility (p p = 0.0042). Our findings imply that K16 is a metastasis-associated protein that promotes EMT and acts as a positive regulator of cellular motility. Furthermore, determining K16 status in CTCs provides prognostic information that helps to identify patients whose tumors are more prone to metastasize.

Keywords