Selective Disruption of Respiratory Supercomplexes as a New Strategy to Suppress Her2(high) Breast Cancer

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Rohlenova, Katerina
Sachaphibulkij, Karishma
Stursa, Jan
Bezawork-Geleta, Ayenachew
Blecha, Jan
Endaya, Berwini
Werner, Lukas
Cerny, Jiri
Zobalova, Renata
Goodwin, Jacob
Spacek, Tomas
Pesdar, Elham Alizadeh
Yan, Bing
Nguyen, Maria Nga
Vondrusova, Magdalena
Sobol, Margaryta
Jezek, Petr
Hozak, Pavel
Truksa, Jaroslav
Rohlena, Jakub
Dong, Lan-Feng
Neuzil, Jiri
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2017
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Abstract

Aims: Expression of the HER2 oncogene in breast cancer is associated with resistance to treatment, and Her2 may regulate bioenergetics. Therefore, we investigated whether disruption of the electron transport chain (ETC) is a viable strategy to eliminate Her2high disease.

Results: We demonstrate that Her2high cells and tumors have increased assembly of respiratory supercomplexes (SCs) and increased complex I-driven respiration in vitro and in vivo. They are also highly sensitive to MitoTam, a novel mitochondrial-targeted derivative of tamoxifen. Unlike tamoxifen, MitoTam efficiently suppresses experimental Her2high tumors without systemic toxicity. Mechanistically, MitoTam inhibits complex I-driven respiration and disrupts respiratory SCs in Her2high background in vitro and in vivo, leading to elevated reactive oxygen species production and cell death. Intriguingly, higher sensitivity of Her2high cells to MitoTam is dependent on the mitochondrial fraction of Her2.

Innovation: Oncogenes such as HER2 can restructure ETC, creating a previously unrecognized therapeutic vulnerability exploitable by SC-disrupting agents such as MitoTam.

Conclusion: We propose that the ETC is a suitable therapeutic target in Her2high disease.

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Antioxidants & Redox Signaling

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26

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2

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© The Author(s) 2017. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Biochemistry and cell biology

Medical biochemistry and metabolomics

Medical biochemistry and metabolomics not elsewhere classified

Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences

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