Dual mechanisms of LYN kinase dysregulation drive aggressive behavior in breast cancer cells

Institution: European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute, Cardiff University
Corresponding Researcher: Matthew Smalley
Email: smalleymj@cardiff.ac.uk
Publication Link(s): https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2018.11.103
Data Link(s): NA
Keyword(s): NA

Summary

The SRC-family kinase LYN is highly expressed in triple-negative/basal-like breast cancer (TNBC) and in the cell of origin of these tumors, c-KIT-positive luminal progenitors. Here, we demonstrate LYN is a downstream effector of c-KIT in normal mammary cells and protective of apoptosis upon genotoxic stress. LYN activity is modulated by PIN1, a prolyl isomerase, and in BRCA1 mutant TNBC PIN1 upregulation activates LYN independently of c-KIT. Furthermore, the full-length LYN splice isoform (as opposed to the Δaa25-45 variant) drives migration and invasion of aggressive TNBC cells, while the ratio of splice variants is informative for breast cancer-specific survival across all breast cancers. Thus, dual mechanisms-uncoupling from upstream signals and splice isoform ratios-drive the activity of LYN in aggressive breast cancers.