Kindlin-2 promotes Src-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of androgen receptor and contributes to breast cancer progression

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作者
Luyao Ma
Yeteng Tian
Tao Qian
Wenjun Li
Chengmin Liu
Bizhu Chu
Qian Kong
Renwei Cai
Panzhu Bai
Lisha Ma
Yi Deng
Ruijun Tian
Chuanyue Wu
Ying Sun
机构
[1] School of Life Sciences,Department of Biology
[2] Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Cell Microenvironment and Disease Research,Department of Chemistry
[3] Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Cell Microenvironment,Department of Pathology
[4] Southern University of Science and Technology,undefined
[5] Southern University of Science and Technology,undefined
[6] School of Medicine and University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute,undefined
[7] University of Pittsburgh,undefined
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Cell Death & Disease | / 13卷
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摘要
Androgen receptor (AR) signaling plays important roles in breast cancer progression. We show here that Kindlin-2, a focal adhesion protein, is critically involved in the promotion of AR signaling and breast cancer progression. Kindlin-2 physically associates with AR and Src through its two neighboring domains, namely F1 and F0 domains, resulting in formation of a Kindlin-2-AR-Src supramolecular complex and consequently facilitating Src-mediated AR Tyr-534 phosphorylation and signaling. Depletion of Kindlin-2 was sufficient to suppress Src-mediated AR Tyr-534 phosphorylation and signaling, resulting in diminished breast cancer cell proliferation and migration. Re-expression of wild-type Kindlin-2, but not AR-binding-defective or Src-binding-defective mutant forms of Kindlin-2, in Kindlin-2-deficient cells restored AR Tyr-534 phosphorylation, signaling, breast cancer cell proliferation and migration. Furthermore, re-introduction of phosphor-mimic mutant AR-Y534D, but not wild-type AR reversed Kindlin-2 deficiency-induced inhibition of AR signaling and breast cancer progression. Finally, using a genetic knockout strategy, we show that ablation of Kindlin-2 from mammary tumors in mouse significantly reduced AR Tyr-534 phosphorylation, breast tumor progression and metastasis in vivo. Our results suggest a critical role of Kindlin-2 in promoting breast cancer progression and shed light on the molecular mechanism through which it functions in this process.
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