TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-epithelialization of cancer cells increases autophagy and DNA damage
T2 - Implications for breast cancer dormancy and relapse
AU - Drago-Garcia, Diana
AU - Giri, Suvendu
AU - Chatterjee, Rishita
AU - Simoni-Nieves, Arturo
AU - Abedrabbo, Maha
AU - Genna, Alessandro
AU - Uribe Rios, Mary Luz
AU - Lindzen, Moshit
AU - Sekar, Arunachalam
AU - Gupta, Nitin
AU - Aharoni, Noa
AU - Bhandari, Tithi
AU - Mayalagu, Agalyan
AU - Schwarzmüller, Luisa
AU - Tarade, Nooraldeen
AU - Zhu, Rong
AU - Mohan-Raju, Harsha Raj
AU - Karatekin, Feride
AU - Roncato, Francesco
AU - Eyal-Lubling, Yaniv
AU - Keidar, Tal
AU - Nof, Yam
AU - Nataraj, Nishanth Belugali
AU - Bernshtein, Karin Shira
AU - Wagner, Bettina
AU - Nair, Nishanth Ulhas
AU - Sanghvi, Neel
AU - Alon, Ronen
AU - Seger, Rony
AU - Pikarsky, Eli
AU - Donzelli, Sara
AU - Blandino, Giovanni
AU - Wiemann, Stefan
AU - Lev, Sima
AU - Prywes, Ron
AU - Barkan, Dalit
AU - Rueda, Oscar M.
AU - Caldas, Carlos
AU - Ruppin, Eytan
AU - Shiloh, Yosef
AU - Dahlhoff, Maik
AU - Yarden, Yosef
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 The Authors, some rights reserved.
PY - 2025/4/22
Y1 - 2025/4/22
N2 - Cellular plasticity mediates tissue development as well as cancer growth and progression. In breast cancer, a shift to a more epithelial phenotype (epithelialization) underlies a state of reversible cell growth arrest called tumor dormancy, which enables drug resistance, tumor recurrence, and metastasis. Here, we explored the mechanisms driving epithelialization and dormancy in aggressive mesenchymal-like breast cancer cells in three-dimensional cultures. Overexpressing either of the epithelial lineage-associated transcription factors OVOL1 or OVOL2 suppressed cell proliferation and migration and promoted transition to an epithelial morphology. The expression of OVOL1 (and of OVOL2 to a lesser extent) was regulated by steroid hormones and growth factors and was more abundant in tumors than in normal mammary cells. An uncharacterized and indirect target of OVOL1/2, C1ORF116, exhibited genetic and epigenetic aberrations in breast tumors, and its expression correlated with poor prognosis in patients. We further found that C1ORF116 was an autophagy receptor that directed the degradation of antioxidant proteins, including thioredoxin. Through C1ORF116 and unidentified mediators, OVOL1 expression dysregulated both redox homeostasis (in association with increased ROS, decreased glutathione, and redistribution of the transcription factor NRF2) and DNA damage and repair (in association with increased DNA oxidation and double-strand breaks and an altered interplay among the kinases p38-MAPK, ATM, and others). Because these effects, as they accumulate in cells, can promote metastasis and dormancy escape, the findings suggest that OVOLs not only promote dormancy entry and maintenance in breast cancer but also may ultimately drive dormancy exit and tumor recurrence.
AB - Cellular plasticity mediates tissue development as well as cancer growth and progression. In breast cancer, a shift to a more epithelial phenotype (epithelialization) underlies a state of reversible cell growth arrest called tumor dormancy, which enables drug resistance, tumor recurrence, and metastasis. Here, we explored the mechanisms driving epithelialization and dormancy in aggressive mesenchymal-like breast cancer cells in three-dimensional cultures. Overexpressing either of the epithelial lineage-associated transcription factors OVOL1 or OVOL2 suppressed cell proliferation and migration and promoted transition to an epithelial morphology. The expression of OVOL1 (and of OVOL2 to a lesser extent) was regulated by steroid hormones and growth factors and was more abundant in tumors than in normal mammary cells. An uncharacterized and indirect target of OVOL1/2, C1ORF116, exhibited genetic and epigenetic aberrations in breast tumors, and its expression correlated with poor prognosis in patients. We further found that C1ORF116 was an autophagy receptor that directed the degradation of antioxidant proteins, including thioredoxin. Through C1ORF116 and unidentified mediators, OVOL1 expression dysregulated both redox homeostasis (in association with increased ROS, decreased glutathione, and redistribution of the transcription factor NRF2) and DNA damage and repair (in association with increased DNA oxidation and double-strand breaks and an altered interplay among the kinases p38-MAPK, ATM, and others). Because these effects, as they accumulate in cells, can promote metastasis and dormancy escape, the findings suggest that OVOLs not only promote dormancy entry and maintenance in breast cancer but also may ultimately drive dormancy exit and tumor recurrence.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003610895&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1126/scisignal.ado3
DO - 10.1126/scisignal.ado3
M3 - Article
C2 - 40261955
AN - SCOPUS:105003610895
SN - 1945-0877
VL - 18
JO - Science Signaling
JF - Science Signaling
IS - 883
M1 - eado3473
ER -