Stratification and therapeutic potential of PML in metastatic breast cancer.
Natalia Martín-MartínMarco PivaJelena UrosevicPaula AldazJames D SutherlandSonia Fernández-RuizLeire ArrealVerónica TorranoAna R CortazarEvarist PlanetMarc GuiuNina Radosevic-RobinStephane GarciaIratxe MacíasFernando SalvadorGiacomo DomeniciOscar M RuedaAmaia Zabala-LetonaAmaia Arruabarrena-AristorenaPatricia Zúñiga-GarcíaAlfredo Caro-MaldonadoLorea Valcárcel-JiménezPilar Sánchez-MosqueraMarta Varela-ReyMaria Luz Martínez-ChantarJuan AnguitaYasir H IbrahimMaurizio ScaltritiCharles H LawrieAna M AransayJuan L IovannaJose BaselgaCarlos CaldasRosa BarrioVioleta SerraMaria dM VivancoAnder MatheuRoger R GomisArkaitz CarracedoPublished in: Nature communications (2016)
Patient stratification has been instrumental for the success of targeted therapies in breast cancer. However, the molecular basis of metastatic breast cancer and its therapeutic vulnerabilities remain poorly understood. Here we show that PML is a novel target in aggressive breast cancer. The acquisition of aggressiveness and metastatic features in breast tumours is accompanied by the elevated PML expression and enhanced sensitivity to its inhibition. Interestingly, we find that STAT3 is responsible, at least in part, for the transcriptional upregulation of PML in breast cancer. Moreover, PML targeting hampers breast cancer initiation and metastatic seeding. Mechanistically, this biological activity relies on the regulation of the stem cell gene SOX9 through interaction of PML with its promoter region. Altogether, we identify a novel pathway sustaining breast cancer aggressiveness that can be therapeutically exploited in combination with PML-based stratification.