Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10871134 | FEBS Letters | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Breast cancer cells develop resistance to endocrine therapies by shifting between estrogen receptor (ER)-regulated and growth factor receptor (GFR)-regulated survival signaling pathways. To study this switch, we propose a mathematical model of crosstalk between these pathways. The model explains why MCF7 sub-clones transfected with HER2 or EGFR show three GFR-distribution patterns, and why the bimodal distribution pattern can be reversibly modulated by estrogen. The model illustrates how transient overexpression of ER activates GFR signaling and promotes estrogen-independent growth. Understanding this survival-signaling switch can help in the design of future therapies to overcome resistance in breast cancer.
Keywords
CSCGFRFCSmTORCCSHER2PI3KEGFR17β-estradiolMAPKMitogen activated protein kinasesNFκBAktBreast cancerfetal calf serumcancer stem cellEstrogen receptor signalingnuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cellsphosphatidylinositide 3-kinasesMathematical modelingEndocrine resistancemammalian target of rapamycinEstrogen receptorGrowth factor receptorEpidermal growth factor receptorHuman epidermal growth factor receptor-2
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Authors
Chun Chen, William T. Baumann, Robert Clarke, John J. Tyson,