1. Phosphorylation of eIF4E in the stroma drives the production and spatial organisation of collagen type I in the mammary gland.
- Author
-
Preston SEJ, Bartish M, Richard VR, Aghigh A, Gonçalves C, Smith-Voudouris J, Huang F, Thébault P, Cleret-Buhot A, Lapointe R, Légaré F, Postovit LM, Zahedi RP, Borchers CH, Miller WH Jr, and Del Rincón SV
- Subjects
- Animals, Collagen metabolism, Collagen Type I genetics, Collagen Type I metabolism, Eukaryotic Initiation Factor-4E metabolism, Female, Humans, Mice, Phosphorylation, Proteomics, Serine metabolism, Tumor Microenvironment, Breast Neoplasms metabolism, Mammary Glands, Human metabolism
- Abstract
The extracellular matrix (ECM) plays critical roles in breast cancer development. Whether ECM composition is regulated by the phosphorylation of eIF4E on serine 209, an event required for tumorigenesis, has not been explored. Herein, we used proteomics and mouse modeling to investigate the impact of mutating serine 209 to alanine on eIF4E (i.e., S209A) on mammary gland (MG) ECM. The proteomic data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRIDE partner repository with the dataset identifier PXD028953. We discovered that S209A knock-in mice, expressing a non-phosphorylatable form of eIF4E, have less collagen-I deposition in native and tumor-bearing MGs, leading to altered tumor cell invasion. Additionally, phospho-eIF4E deficiency impacts collagen topology; fibers at the tumor-stroma boundary in phospho-eIF4E-deficient mice run parallel to the tumor edge but radiate outwards in wild-type mice. Finally, a phospho-eIF4E-deficient tumor microenvironment resists anti-PD-1 therapy-induced collagen deposition, correlating with an increased anti-tumor response to immunotherapy. Clinically, we showed that collagen-I and phospho-eIF4E are positively correlated in human breast cancer samples, and that stromal phospho-eIF4E expression is influenced by tumor proximity. Together, our work defines the importance of phosphorylation of eIF4E on S209 as a regulator of MG collagen architecture in the tumor microenvironment, thereby positioning phospho-eIF4E as a therapeutic target to augment response to therapy., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest CHB is the CSO of MRM Proteomics, Inc. RPZ is the CEO of MRM Proteomics, Inc. All other authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF