Title of article :
Label-free LC-MS analysis of HER2+ breast cancer cell line response to HER2 inhibitor treatment
Author/Authors :
Di Luca, Alessio National Institute for Cellular Biotechnology - DCU - Glasnevin - Dublin 9 - Dublin, Ireland , Henry, Michael National Institute for Cellular Biotechnology - DCU - Glasnevin - Dublin 9 - Dublin, Ireland , Meleady, Paula National Institute for Cellular Biotechnology - DCU - Glasnevin - Dublin 9 - Dublin, Ireland , O’Connor, Robert National Institute for Cellular Biotechnology - DCU - Glasnevin - Dublin 9 - Dublin, Ireland - School of Nursing and Human Sciences - DCU - Glasnevin - Dublin 9 - Dublin, Ireland
Abstract :
Background: Human epidermal growth-factor receptor (HER)-2 is overexpressed in 25 % of breast-cancers and is associated with an aggressive form of the disease with significantly shortened disease free and overall survival. In
recent years, the use of HER2-targeted therapies, monoclonal-antibodies and small molecule tyrosine-kinase
inhibitors has significantly improved the clinical outcome for HER2-positive breast-cancer patients. However, only
a fraction of HER2-amplified patients will respond to therapy and the use of these treatments is often limited by
tumour drug insensitivity or resistance and drug toxicities. Currently there is no way to identify likely responders or
rational combinations with the potential to improve HER2-focussed treatment outcome.
Methods: In order to further understand the molecular mechanisms of treatment-response with HER2-inhibitors,
we used a highly-optimised and reproducible quantitative label-free LC-MS strategy to characterize the proteomes
of HER2-overexpressing breast-cancer cell-lines (SKBR3, BT474 and HCC1954) in response to drug-treatment with
HER2-inhibitors (lapatinib, neratinib or afatinib).
Results: Following 12 hours treatment with different HER2-inhibitors in the BT474 cell-line; compared to the
untreated cells, 16 proteins changed significantly in abundance following lapatinib treatment (1 μM), 21 proteins
changed significantly following neratinib treatment (150 nM) and 38 proteins changed significantly following
afatinib treatment (150 nM). Whereas following 24 hours treatment with neratinib (200 nM) 46 proteins changed
significantly in abundance in the HCC1954 cell-line and 23 proteins in the SKBR3 cell-line compared to the
untreated cells. Analysing the data we found that, proteins like trifunctional-enzyme subunit-alpha, mitochondrial;
heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein-R and lamina-associated polypeptide 2, isoform alpha were up-regulated
whereas heat shock cognate 71 kDa protein was down-regulated in 3 or more comparisons.
Conclusion: This proteomic study highlights several proteins that are closely associated with early HER2-inhibitor
response and will provide a valuable resource for further investigation of ways to improve efficacy of breast-cancer treatment.
Keywords :
Afatinib , Breast cancer , HER2 , Label-free LC-MS Proteomics , Lapatinib , Neratinib
Journal title :
Daru:Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences