Cancer Letters

Cancer Letters

Volume 366, Issue 1, 28 September 2015, Pages 84-92
Cancer Letters

Original Articles
Anti-metastatic outcome of isoform-specific prolactin receptor targeting in breast cancer

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canlet.2015.06.010Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • The work establishes a crucial role for the long prolactin receptor in metastatic spread of breast cancer.

  • The spice-modulating agent has potential as a well-tolerated cancer therapeutic.

  • The principle of isoform-specific knockdown can be applied to multiple targets in breast and other cancers.

Abstract

Controversy exists concerning the role of the long prolactin receptor (PRLR) in the progression of breast cancer. By targeting pre-mRNA splicing, we succeeded in knocking down only the long PRLR in vivo, leaving the short forms unaffected. Using two orthotopic and highly-metastatic models of breast cancer, one of which was syngeneic (mouse 4T1) to allow assessment of tumor-immune interactions and one of which was endocrinologically humanized (human BT-474) to activate human PRLRs, we examined the effect of long PRLR knockdown on disease progression. In both models, knockdown dramatically inhibited metastatic spread to the lungs and liver and resulted in increased central death in the primary tumor. In the syngeneic model, immune infiltrates in metastatic sites were changed from innate inflammatory cells to lymphocytes, with an increase in the incidence of tumor-specific cytotoxic T cells. Long PRLR knockdown in three-dimensional culture induced apoptosis of tumor-initiating/cancer stem cells (death of 95% of cells displaying stem cell markers in 15 days). We conclude that the long PRLR plays an important role in breast cancer metastasis.

Keywords

Splice isoform
Prolactin receptor
Metastasis
Cancer stem cells

Cited by (0)

1

Current address: Department of Veterinary Clinical Pathobiology, University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113 8657, Japan.