Chaperone-mediated autophagy modulates Snail protein stability: implications for breast cancer metastasis

Cited 7 time in scopus
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Title
Chaperone-mediated autophagy modulates Snail protein stability: implications for breast cancer metastasis
Author(s)
K J Ryu; K W Lee; Seung-Ho Park; T Kim; K S Hong; H Kim; M Kim; D W Ok; G N B Kwon; Young-Jun Park; H K Kwon; C Hwangbo; K D Kim; J E Lee; J Yoo
Bibliographic Citation
Molecular Cancer, vol. 23, pp. 227-227
Publication Year
2024
Abstract
Breast cancer remains a significant health concern, with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) being an aggressive subtype with poor prognosis. Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is important in early-stage tumor to invasive malignancy progression. Snail, a central EMT component, is tightly regulated and may be subjected to proteasomal degradation. We report a novel proteasomal independent pathway involving chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) in Snail degradation, mediated via its cytosolic interaction with HSC70 and lysosomal targeting, which prevented its accumulation in luminal-type breast cancer cells. Conversely, Snail predominantly localized to the nucleus, thus evading CMA-mediated degradation in TNBC cells. Starvation-induced CMA activation downregulated Snail in TNBC cells by promoting cytoplasmic translocation. Evasion of CMA-mediated Snail degradation induced EMT, and enhanced metastatic potential of luminal-type breast cancer cells. Our findings elucidate a previously unrecognized role of CMA in Snail regulation, highlight its significance in breast cancer, and provide a potential therapeutic target for clinical interventions.
Keyword
Chaperone-mediated autophagySnailEMTMetastasisBreast cancer
ISSN
1476-4598
Publisher
Springer-BMC
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12943-024-02138-0
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of Research on National Challenges > Environmental diseases research center > 1. Journal Articles
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