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  • Functional Annotation of ES...
    Lei, Jonathan T.; Shao, Jieya; Zhang, Jin; Iglesia, Michael; Chan, Doug W.; Cao, Jin; Anurag, Meenakshi; Singh, Purba; He, Xiaping; Kosaka, Yoshimasa; Matsunuma, Ryoichi; Crowder, Robert; Hoog, Jeremy; Phommaly, Chanpheng; Goncalves, Rodrigo; Ramalho, Susana; Peres, Raquel Mary Rodrigues; Punturi, Nindo; Schmidt, Cheryl; Bartram, Alex; Jou, Eric; Devarakonda, Vaishnavi; Holloway, Kimberly R.; Lai, W. Victoria; Hampton, Oliver; Rogers, Anna; Tobias, Ethan; Parikh, Poojan A.; Davies, Sherri R.; Li, Shunqiang; Ma, Cynthia X.; Suman, Vera J.; Hunt, Kelly K.; Watson, Mark A.; Hoadley, Katherine A.; Thompson, E. Aubrey; Chen, Xi; Kavuri, Shyam M.; Creighton, Chad J.; Maher, Christopher A.; Perou, Charles M.; Haricharan, Svasti; Ellis, Matthew J.

    Cell reports (Cambridge), 08/2018, Letnik: 24, Številka: 6
    Journal Article

    RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) detects estrogen receptor alpha gene (ESR1) fusion transcripts in estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer, but their role in disease pathogenesis remains unclear. We examined multiple ESR1 fusions and found that two, both identified in advanced endocrine treatment-resistant disease, encoded stable and functional fusion proteins. In both examples, ESR1-e6>YAP1 and ESR1-e6>PCDH11X, ESR1 exons 1–6 were fused in frame to C-terminal sequences from the partner gene. Functional properties include estrogen-independent growth, constitutive expression of ER target genes, and anti-estrogen resistance. Both fusions activate a metastasis-associated transcriptional program, induce cellular motility, and promote the development of lung metastasis. ESR1-e6>YAP1- and ESR1-e6>PCDH11X-induced growth remained sensitive to a CDK4/6 inhibitor, and a patient-derived xenograft (PDX) naturally expressing the ESR1-e6>YAP1 fusion was also responsive. Transcriptionally active ESR1 fusions therefore trigger both endocrine therapy resistance and metastatic progression, explaining the association with fatal disease progression, although CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment is predicted to be effective. Display omitted •ESR1 fusions drive ligand-independent growth and endocrine therapy resistance•ESR1 fusions reprogram the ER cistrome to drive EMT and metastasis•CDK4/6 inhibition suppresses ESR1 fusion-induced growth Lei et al. show that transcriptionally active estrogen receptor gene (ESR1) fusions identified from late-stage, treatment-refractory estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer drive pan-endocrine therapy resistance and metastatic progression. Growth of breast tumors driven by ESR1 fusions at primary and metastatic sties can be suppressed with a CDK4/6 inhibitor.