Role of the lncRNA BORG in Breast Cancer Metastatic Progression and Recurrence

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $454,781 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Although metastasis is the most lethal characteristic of breast cancer (BC), our understanding of the molecular mechanisms that govern this event remains incomplete. Interestingly, many BCs disseminate long before their primary tumors become symptomatic. In fact, ~50% of women diagnosed with small tumors of the breast (4 mm) already harbor disseminated carcinoma cells in their bone marrow. Moreover, these micrometastases escape clinical detection by remaining latent for years before reemerging as incurable secondary tumors that are insensitive to chemotherapies that were originally effective against the primary tumor. A major barrier to eradicating BC reflects the paucity of knowledge related to how mammary tumors acquire metastatic and recurrent phenotypes, which underlies the inability of science and medicine to detect and treat latent micrometastases. These knowledge deficits are especially problematic for triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs), which are highly aggressive and prone to rapid relapse; they also lack FDA-approved targeted therapies necessary to improve their dismal overall survival rates. Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have recently emerged as powerful global regulators of chromatin remodeling and gene expression in diverse physiological settings, including cell and tissue homeostasis, embryogenesis and development. Moreover, an ever expanding array of scientific evidence related to the pathophysiology of lncRNAs in human disease led us to postulate that developing and progressing TNBCs hijack the global chromatin reprogramming ability of lncRNAs, thereby eliciting emergence from metastatic latency and initiating lethal disease recurrence. Accordingly, we identified BORG (BMP/OP-Responsive Gene (BORG), as a powerful oncogenic lncRNA whose aberrant expression correlated with the acquisition of EMT (epithelial-mesenchymal transition) and metastatic phenotypes in (a) human and murine TNBCs cells; (b) human breast tumors and their corresponding CNS metastases; and (c) patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of human BC as compared to normal breast epithelial cells. Additionally, BORG is sufficient in driving latent disseminated TNBCs cells to reactivate proliferative programs both in vitro and in vivo, events associated with epigenomic reprogramming operant in repressing cellular senescence programs, and in activating cell survival programs. Based on these and other preliminary findings, we hypothesize that BORG drives TNBC metastasis and recurrence by (i) remodeling the epigenome to reactivate proliferative programs that circumvent quiescence- and senescence-associated transcriptomes, and (ii) promoting the induction of survival signaling systems coupled to the acquisition of chemoresistant phenotypes. These hypotheses will be addressed by two Specific Aims. Aim 1 will determine the mechanisms whereby BORG:TRIM28 complexes form and drive TNBC metastasis and recurrence. We will identify the minimal BORG determinants necessary to bind ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9832675
Project number
5R01CA236273-02
Recipient
CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
William Schiemann
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$454,781
Award type
5
Project period
2018-12-06 → 2023-11-30