Vol 118, No 2 (Supplement) 2013
Supplement abstract

In triple negative breast tumor cells, PLC-β2 promotes the conversion of CD133high to CD133low phenotype and reduces the CD133-related invasiveness

Published 2014-01-13

How to Cite

Bertagnolo, V., Brugnoli, F., Grassilli, S., Nika, E., & Capitani, S. (2014). In triple negative breast tumor cells, PLC-β2 promotes the conversion of CD133high to CD133low phenotype and reduces the CD133-related invasiveness. Italian Journal of Anatomy and Embryology, 118(2), 25. Retrieved from https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/ijae/article/view/3426

Abstract

Beyond its possible relationship with stemness of tumor cells, CD133/prominin is a highly glycosylated trans-membrane protein that correlates with tumor size, metastasis and clinical stage of triple negative breast cancers (TNBC), that represent 20% of all breast tumors and have a particularly worse clinical outcome than other tumor subtypes [1]. The correlation between the levels of CD133 expression and the biology of breast tumor cells was studied in CD133low and CD133high cell subpopulations isolated from MDA-MB-231 cells (ER-, PR-, HER2-). High expression of CD133 characterizes a small percentage of cells with larger adhesion area, lower proliferation rate, higher invasion capability and increased expression of proteins involved in metastasis and drug resistance of breast cancers. PLC-b2 expression, that plays a crucial role in malignancy of breast tumor cells [2, 3], inversely correlates with the levels of CD133 and has a role in inducing the CD133high cells to CD133low cells conversion. The forced up-regulation of PLC-b2 counteracts the invasiveness of CD133high MDAMB- 231, suggesting that, in TNBC, the de-regulation of this PLC isozyme is responsible of the switch from an early to a mature tumoral phenotype also by reducing the expression of CD133. These data might contribute to identify unexplored key steps in TNBC malignancy, to be considered for potential therapeutic strategies.