Inducible re-epithelialization of cancer cells increases autophagy and DNA damage: implications for breast cancer dormancy

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Abstract

Epithelial lineage differentiation is pivotal to mammary gland development and it can pause metastasis of breast cancer (BC) by inducing tumor dormancy. To simulate this, we expressed epithelial genes in mesenchymal BC cells. Inducible expression of the epithelial OVOL genes in metastatic BC cells suppressed proliferation and migration. We found that C1ORF116 , an OVOL’s target, is susceptible to genetic and epigenetic aberrations in BC. It is regulated by steroids and functions as a putative autophagy receptor that inhibits antioxidants like thioredoxin. Accordingly, boosting epithelialization lowered glutathione, elevated reactive oxygen species and increased both DNA oxidation and double strand breaks. Epithelialization also associated with redistribution of NRF2 and an altered interplay among p38, ATM, and the other kinases regulating the DNA damage response. Hence, hormonal regulation of OVOLs and chronic stress might permit epithelial differentiation and retard exit from dormancy, while altering redox homeostasis and permitting DNA damage accumulation, which may awaken dormant tumors.

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