Human epidermal growth factor receptor-3 expression is regulated at transcriptional level in breast cancer settings by junctional adhesion molecule-a via a pathway involving beta-catenin and foxa1

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Abstract

The success of breast cancer therapies targeting the human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 (HER2) is limited by the development of drug resistance by mechanisms including upregulation of HER3. Having reported that HER2 expression and resistance to HER2-targeted therapies can be regulated by Junctional Adhesion Molecule-A (JAM-A), this study investigated if JAM-A regulates HER3 expression. Expressional alteration of JAM-A in breast cancer cells was used to test expressional effects on HER3 and its effectors, alongside associated functional behaviors, in vitro and semi-in vivo. HER3 transcription factors were identified and tested for regulation by JAM-A. Finally a patient tissue microarray was used to interrogate connections between putative pathway components connecting JAM-A and HER3. This study reveals for the first time that HER3 and its effectors are regulated at gene/protein expression level by JAM-A in breast cancer cell lines; with functional consequences in in vitro and semi-in vivo models. In bioinformatic, cellular and patient tissue models, this was associated with regulation of the HER3 transcription factor FOXA1 by JAM-A via a pathway involving β-catenin. Our data suggest a novel model whereby JAM-A expression regulates β-catenin localization, in turn regulating FOXA1 expression, which could drive HER3 gene transcription. JAM-A merits investigation as a novel target to prevent upregulation of HER3 during the development of resistance to HER2-targeted therapies, or to reduce HER3-dependent tumorigenic signaling.

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Cruz, R. G. B., Madden, S. F., Richards, C. E., Vellanki, S. H., Jahns, H., Hudson, L., … Hopkins, A. M. (2021). Human epidermal growth factor receptor-3 expression is regulated at transcriptional level in breast cancer settings by junctional adhesion molecule-a via a pathway involving beta-catenin and foxa1. Cancers, 13(4), 1–25. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13040871

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