Low HER2 enables dedifferentiation and transformation of normal breast epithelial cells via chromatin opening
Abstract
Overexpression of the human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2) protein in breast cancer patients is a predictor of poor prognosis and resistance to therapies. Despite significant advances in the development of targeted therapies and improvements in the 5-year survival rate of metastatic HER2-positive breast cancer patients, a better understanding of the disease at an early stage is needed to prevent its progression. Here, we used an inducible breast cancer transformation system that allows investigation of early molecular changes at high temporal resolution. HER2 overexpression to similar levels as those observed in a subtype of HER2 positive breast cancer patients induced transformation of MCF10A cells and resulted in gross morphological changes, increased anchorage-independent growth of cells, and altered transcriptional programme of genes associated with oncogenic transformation. Global phosphoproteomic analysis during the first few hours of HER2 induction predominantly detected an increase in protein phosphorylation. Intriguingly, this correlated with a wave of chromatin opening, as measured by ATAC-seq on acini isolated from 3D cell culture. We observed that HER2 overexpression leads to reprogramming of many distal regulatory regions and promotes reprogramming-associated heterogeneity. We found that a subset of cells acquired a dedifferentiated breast stem-like phenotype, making them likely candidates for malignant transformation. Our data show that this population of cells, which counterintuitively enriches for relatively low HER2 protein abundance and increased chromatin accessibility, possesses transformational drive, resulting in increased anchorage-independent growth in vitro compared to cells not displaying a stem-like phenotype. Our data provide a discovery platform for signalling to chromatin pathways in HER2-driven cancers, offering an opportunity for biomarker discovery and identification of novel drug targets.
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