ATG9A Is Overexpressed in Triple Negative Breast Cancer and Its In Vitro Extinction Leads to the Inhibition of Pro-Cancer Phenotypes

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TitreATG9A Is Overexpressed in Triple Negative Breast Cancer and Its In Vitro Extinction Leads to the Inhibition of Pro-Cancer Phenotypes
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursClaude-Taupin A, Fonderflick L, Gauthier T, Mansi L, Pallandre J-R, Borg C, Perez V, Monnien F, Algros M-P, Vigneron M, Adami P, Delage-Mourroux R, Peixoto P, Herfs M, Boyer-Guittaut M, Hervouet E
JournalCELLS
Volume7
Pagination248
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
Mots-clésATG9A, autophagy, CRISPR/Cas9, MDA-MB-436, shRNA, triple negative breast cancer
Résumé

Early detection and targeted treatments have led to a significant decrease in mortality linked to breast cancer (BC), however, important issues need to be addressed in the future. One of them will be to find new triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) therapeutic strategies, since none are currently efficiently targeting this subtype of BC. Since numerous studies have reported the possibility of targeting the autophagy pathway to treat or limit cancer progression, we analyzed the expression of six autophagy genes (ATG9A, ATG9B, BECLIN1, LC3B, NIX and P62/SQSTM1) in breast cancer tissue, and compared their expression with healthy adjacent tissue. In our study, we observed an increase in ATG9A mRNA expression in TNBC samples from our breast cancer cohort. We also showed that this increase of the transcript was confirmed at the protein level on paraffin-embedded tissues. To corroborate these in vivo data, we designed shRNA- and CRISPR/Cas9-driven inhibition of ATG9A expression in the triple negative breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-436, in order to determine its role in the regulation of cancer phenotypes. We found that ATG9A inhibition led to an inhibition of in vitro cancer features, suggesting that ATG9A can be considered as a new marker of TNBC and might be considered in the future as a target to develop new specific TNBC therapies.

DOI10.3390/cells7120248