PERSONAL DE APOYO
CUELLO CARRION Fernando Dario
artículos
Título:
HER2 and beta-catenin protein location: importance in the prognosis of breast cancer patients and their correlation when breast cancer cells suffer stressful situations
Autor/es:
CUELLO CARRION F. D.; SHORTREDE J. E.; ALVAREZ OLMEDO D.; CAYADO-GUTIERREZ N.; CASTRO G. N.; ZOPPINO F. C. M.; GUERRERO M.; MARTINIS E,; WUILLOUD R.; GOMEZ N. N.; BIAGGIO B.; OROZCO J.; GAGO F. E.; CIOCCA L. A.; FANELLI M. A.; CIOCCA D. R.
Revista:
CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2015 vol. 32 p. 151 - 168
ISSN:
0262-0898
Resumen:
In human breast cancer, beta-catenin localization has been related with disease prognosis. Since HER2-positive patients are an important subgroup, and that in breast cancer cells a direct interaction of beta-catenin/HER2 has been reported, in the present study we have explored whether beta-catenin location is related with the disease survival. The study was performed in a tumor bank from patients (n=140) that did not receive specific anti-HER2 therapy. The proteins were detected by immunohistochemistry in serial sections, 47 (33.5%) patients were HER2-positive with a long follow-up. HER2-positive patients that displayed beta-catenin at the plasma membrane (completely surrounding the tumour cells) showed a significant better disease-free survival and overall survival than the patients showing the protein on other locations. Then we explored the dynamics of the co-expression of beta-catenin and HER2 in human MCF-7 and SKBR3 cells exposed to different stressful situations. In untreated conditions MCF-7 and SKBR3 cells showed very different beta-catenin localization. In MCF-7 cells, cadmium administration caused a striking change in beta-catenin localization driving it from plasma membrane to cytoplasmic and perinuclear areas and HER2 showed a similar localization patterns. The changes induced by cadmium were compared with heat shock, H2O2 and tamoxifen treatments. In conclusion, this study shows the dynamical associations of HER2 and beta-catenin and their changes in subcellular localizations driven by stressful situations. In addition, we report for the first time the correlation between plasma membrane associated beta-catenin in HER2-positive breast cancer and survival outcome, and the importance of the protein localization in breast cancer samples.