International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Aug 2020)

Evidence for Enhanced Exosome Production in Aromatase Inhibitor-Resistant Breast Cancer Cells

  • Giuseppina Augimeri,
  • Giusi La Camera,
  • Luca Gelsomino,
  • Cinzia Giordano,
  • Salvatore Panza,
  • Diego Sisci,
  • Catia Morelli,
  • Balázs Győrffy,
  • Daniela Bonofiglio,
  • Sebastiano Andò,
  • Ines Barone,
  • Stefania Catalano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21165841
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 16
p. 5841

Abstract

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Aromatase inhibitors (AIs) represent the standard anti-hormonal therapy for post-menopausal estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, but their efficacy is limited by the emergence of AI resistance (AIR). Exosomes act as vehicles to engender cancer progression and drug resistance. The goal of this work was to study exosome contribution in AIR mechanisms, using estrogen-dependent MCF-7 breast cancer cells as models and MCF-7 LTED (Long-Term Estrogen Deprived) subline, modeling AIR. We found that exosome secretion was significantly increased in MCF-7 LTED cells compared to MCF-7 cells. MCF-7 LTED cells also exhibited a higher amount of exosomal RNA and proteins than MCF-7 cells. Proteomic analysis revealed significant alterations in the cellular proteome. Indeed, we showed an enrichment of proteins frequently identified in exosomes in MCF-7 LTED cells. The most up-regulated proteins in MCF-7 LTED cells were represented by Rab GTPases, important vesicle transport-regulators in cancer, that are significantly mapped in “small GTPase-mediated signal transduction”, “protein transport” and “vesicle-mediated transport” Gene Ontology categories. Expression of selected Rab GTPases was validated by immunoblotting. Collectively, we evidence, for the first time, that AIR breast cancer cells display an increased capability to release exosomes, which may be associated with an enhanced Rab GTPase expression. These data provide the rationale for further studies directed at clarifying exosome’s role on endocrine therapy, with the aim to offer relevant markers and druggable therapeutic targets for the management of hormone-resistant breast cancers.

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