KiSS1 gene as a novel mediator of TGFβ-mediated cell invasion in triple negative breast cancer.
Tian. Jun J; Al-Odaini. Amal A AA; Wang. Yun Y; Korah. Juliana J; Dai. Meiou M; Xiao. Lan L; Ali. Suhad S; Lebrun. Jean-Jacques JJ
Key Findings
- KiSS1 is a downstream target of TGF‑β/Smad2 signaling in triple‑negative breast cancer cells.
- Knocking down KiSS1 blocks TGF‑β‑induced invasion and reduces MMP9 activity.
- Kisspeptin‑10 (KP‑10) itself promotes cancer cell invasion via the MAPK/Erk pathway.
- A peptide antagonist (p234) can inhibit KiSS1 and reduce TGF‑β‑driven invasion.
Practical Outcomes
- For the biohacker community focused on longevity, metabolism, or performance, this research offers no actionable protocols or benefits. In fact, it suggests that KP‑10 could be harmful in the context of certain cancers, so there is no recommended use of kisspeptin‑10 for health optimization.
Summary
The study shows that the small peptide kisspeptin‑10 (KP‑10) can actually make aggressive breast cancer cells more invasive by turning on certain growth pathways, and that blocking the related protein KiSS1 can reduce this effect. This is a cancer‑cell biology finding, not a health‑boosting or performance‑related result.
Abstract
The invasive and metastatic phenotypes of breast cancer correlate with high recurrence rates and poor survival outcomes. Transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) promotes tumor progression and metastasis in aggressive breast cancer. Here, we identified the kisspeptin KiSS1 as a downstream target of canonical TGFβ/Smad2 pathway in triple negative breast cancer cells. We also found KiSS1 expression to be required for TGFβ-induced cancer cell invasion. Indeed, knockdown expression of KiSS1 blocked TGFβ-mediated cancer cell invasion as well as metalloproteinase (MMP9) expression and activity. Interestingly, Kisspeptin-10 (KP-10), the smallest active form of kisspeptin also stimulates cancer cell invasive behavior through activation of MAPK/Erk pathway. We described a positive feedback loop between KiSS1 and p21 downstream of TGFβ, further contributing to TGFβ-induced cancer cell invasion. Lastly, we explored both the clinical utility of KiSS1 as a lymph node involvement predictive tool and its potential as a therapeutic target. We found KiSS1 high expression to correlate with lymph node positive status. Furthermore, blocking KiSS1 using a specific small peptide antagonist (p234) impaired TGFβ-mediated cell invasion and MMP9 induction. Together, our results define an essential role of KiSS1 in regulating TGFβ pro-invasive effects and define KiSS1 as a therapeutic new target for triple negative breast cancer.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-10-06T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.cellsig.2017.10.002
26
69