Progesterone receptors drive advanced breast cancer phenotypes including circulating tumor- and stem-like cell expansion in the context of ESR1 mutation

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Abstract

Endocrine therapy resistance remains a major challenge in the treatment of advanced estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancer. This can be driven by acquired mutations in the estrogen receptor gene (ESR1), such as Y537S or D538G, that primarily emerge in patients with prior aromatase inhibitor therapy and results in constitutive estrogen-independent ER activity. Progesterone receptors (PR) are important modifiers of ER activity, in part via direct binding. We previously showed that PR mediates expansion of cancer stem-like cell (CSC) populations and promotes tamoxifen resistance in nuclear ER/PR transcriptional complexes. In this study, we sought to define whether PR function changes in the context of ESR1 mutations. PR readily interacted with wild type (WT), but not Y537S or D538G ERs. RNA-seq and ChIP-seq studies demonstrated that ER+ breast cancer models expressing Y537S ER exhibited a distinct response to progesterone. CSC populations were enhanced in Y537S ER+ cells compared to WT ER+ cells. PR knockdown demonstrated that this property required PR expression but was unresponsive to antiprogestins. Moreover, we identified PR-dependent transcriptional programs such as the unfolded protein response (UPR) that can be leveraged to target CSC populations in Y537S ESR1-mutant breast cancer. The UPR activator ErSO, but not UPR inhibitors, blocked expansion of CSCs in WT as well as Y537S ER+ models. Together, our findings demonstrate a critical interplay between PR and mutant ER function and provide insight into PR-driven pathways including hyperactivation of the stress-sensing UPR that can be exploited as potential therapeutic avenues in advanced ER+ breast cancer.

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