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A new role for a triple-negative breast cancer target

By: Katherine Unger Baillie | kbaillie@upenn.edu | 215-898-9194 Date: Dec 19, 2019
Led by Penn Vet scientists, a new study reveals that the protein deltaNp63, which fosters the initiation and progression of triple-negative breast cancer, also helps fuel mammary gland development during puberty in mice. Without it (right panel), the mammary duct had altered structure.
Led by Penn Vet scientists, a new study reveals that the protein deltaNp63, which fosters the initiation and progression of triple-negative breast cancer, also helps fuel mammary gland development during puberty in mice. Without it (right panel), the mammary duct had altered structure.
 

Unlike almost every other organ, the mammary gland does not develop until after birth. And it’s unusually dynamic, shape-shifting during menstrual cycles, puberty, pregnancy, and lactation. 

  Dr. Rumela Chakrabarti, Penn Vet
Dr. Rumela Chakrabarti
 

These changes require energy. In a study using a new, genetically altered mouse model, researchers led by Rumela Chakrabarti of Penn’s School of Veterinary Medicine have uncovered a key protein involved in supplying the mammary gland with fuel during puberty. It’s a protein that her group had earlier shown to play a role in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), a particularly aggressive form of the disease.

Besides illuminating an important feature of mammalian biological development, the findings also give reassurance that targeting this protein, known as deltaNp63, to treat cancer in adults could be done without interfering with critical developmental stages that occur later in life. 

“Creating a new mouse model that allows us to control when p63 is expressed enabled us to study this molecule in different developmental stages,” Chakrabarti says of the work, published in the journal FEBS Letters. “The fact that it is not required later on after puberty means that it’s a viable drug target for triple-negative breast cancer. And we think it could be applicable to other cancers, like squamous cell carcinomas and esophageal cancer as well.”

Chakrabarti has focused on this molecule since her postdoctoral fellowship, revealing different features of its involvement in the mammary gland stem cells that give rise to every other cell type in the mammary gland tissue. In 2014, Chakrabarti and colleagues found it was important in initiating TNBC, and last year they demonstrated that it also acts to direct a type of immune cell to breast tumors, serving to aggravate the progression and spread of cancer.

“We’ve found that this molecule is like a master regulator,” says Chakrabarti. “It can regulate the tumor cells’ stem cell activity, and it can regulate the immune cells around the tumor cells. But we also wanted to know how it acted in normal cells.”

To do that, the researchers fashioned a new strain of mice in which they could deplete the animals of deltaNp63 as desired. With this mouse model in hand, they were able to assess how deleting that gene affected the mammary gland.

While inducing the deletion of deltaNp63 during pregnancy and adulthood had no significant effect on mammary gland development and function, the team found significant impacts arose when deletion occurred during puberty. 

“It may be that the initial burst of energy that is required during puberty depends on deltaNp63, but once you get through that, it isn’t as critical,” says Chakrabarti.

In mammary epithelial cells, which line the mammary gland, a lack of deltaNp63 (right panel) led to a reduction in mitochondria, which generate energy for the cell.
In mammary epithelial cells, which line the mammary gland, a lack of deltaNp63 (right panel) led to a reduction in mitochondria,
which generate energy for the cell.
 

Losing the protein during puberty led to a reduction in energy production in the mammary gland cells and caused mammary gland ducts to be malformed. Further analysis suggests that deltaNp63 likely activates other proteins that are involved in both cellular metabolism and in the organization of cell structure during puberty.

“We already knew that p63 was important for mammary gland stem cells, but we didn’t know that it was involved in regulating the cells’ metabolism,” Chakrabarti says. “Mammary stem cells have a high energy need during the extensive tissue remodeling that occurs during puberty. Cancer cells also have a high energy need. So this finding helps tie together a number of roles that p63 seems to be playing in the mammary gland.”

In follow-up work, Chakrabarti’s lab is investigating the connection between metabolism and TNBC, with an eye toward pursuing deltaNp63 as a possible therapeutic target to slow down the spread of disease.

Rumela Chakrabarti is an assistant professor of biomedical sciences in the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine.

Chakrabarti’s coauthors from Penn Vet were first author Sushil Kumar, Ajeya Nandi, and Aakash Mahesh. In addition, Satrajit Sinha of the State University of New York at Buffalo and Elsa Flores of the Moffit Cancer Center coauthored the paper.

Support for the study came from the Penn Vet Comparative Pathology Core, the Flow Cytometry Core at the University of Pennsylvania and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.


About Penn Vet

Ranked among the top ten veterinary schools worldwide, the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine (Penn Vet) is a global leader in veterinary education, research, and clinical care. Founded in 1884, Penn Vet is the first veterinary school developed in association with a medical school. The school is a proud member of the One Health initiative, linking human, animal, and environmental health.

Penn Vet serves a diverse population of animals at its two campuses, which include extensive diagnostic and research laboratories. Ryan Hospital in Philadelphia provides care for dogs, cats, and other domestic/companion animals, handling more than 34,600 patient visits a year. New Bolton Center, Penn Vet’s large-animal hospital on nearly 700 acres in rural Kennett Square, PA, cares for horses and livestock/farm animals. The hospital handles more than 6,200 patient visits a year, while our Field Services have gone out on more than 5,500 farm service calls, treating some 18,700 patients at local farms. In addition, New Bolton Center’s campus includes a swine center, working dairy, and poultry unit that provide valuable research for the agriculture industry.