Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Lysyl oxidase‐like 2 (LOXL2), a new regulator of cell polarity required for metastatic dissemination of basal‐like breast carcinomas

2011; Springer Nature; Volume: 3; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/emmm.201100156

ISSN

1757-4684

Autores

Gema Moreno‐Bueno, Fernando Salvador, Alberto Martín, Alfredo Floristán, Eva P. Cuevas, Vanesa Santos, Amalia Montes, Saleta Morales, María Ángeles Castilla, Alejandro Rojo‐Sebastián, Alejandra Martínez, David Hardisson, Katalin Csiszár, Francisco Portillo, Héctor Peinado, José Palacios, Amparo Cano,

Tópico(s)

Kruppel-like factors research

Resumo

Basal‐like breast carcinoma is characterized by the expression of basal/myoepithelial markers, undifferentiated phenotype, highly aggressive behaviour and frequent triple negative status (ESR−, PR−, Her2neu−). We have previously shown that epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) occurs in basal‐like breast tumours and identified Lysyl‐oxidase‐like 2 (LOXL2) as an EMT player and poor prognosis marker in squamous cell carcinomas. We now show that LOXL2 mRNA is overexpressed in basal‐like human breast carcinomas. Breast carcinoma cell lines with basal‐like phenotype show a specific cytoplasmic/perinuclear LOXL2 expression, and this subcellular distribution is significantly associated with distant metastatic incidence in basal‐like breast carcinomas. LOXL2 silencing in basal‐like carcinoma cells induces a mesenchymal‐epithelial transition (MET) associated with a decrease of tumourigenicity and suppression of metastatic potential. Mechanistic studies indicate that LOXL2 maintains the mesenchymal phenotype of basal‐like carcinoma cells by a novel mechanism involving transcriptional downregulation of Lgl2 and claudin1 and disorganization of cell polarity and tight junction complexes. Therefore, intracellular LOXL2 is a new candidate marker of basal‐like carcinomas and a target to block metastatic dissemination of this aggressive breast tumour subtype.

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