Abstract
Transcription factor AP-2β (TFAP2B) regulates embryonic organ development and is overexpressed in alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare childhood malignancy. Gene expression profiling has implicated AP-2β in breast cancer (BC). This study characterizes AP-2β expression in the mammary gland and in BC. AP-2β protein expression was assessed in the normal mammary gland epithelium, in various reactive, metaplastic and pre-invasive neoplastic lesions and in two clinical BC cohorts comprising >2000 patients. BCs from various genetically engineered mouse (GEM) models were also evaluated. Human BC cell lines served as functional models to study siRNA-mediated inhibition of AP-2β. The normal mammary gland epithelium showed scattered AP-2β-positive cells in the luminal cell layer. Various reactive and pre-invasive neoplastic lesions, including apocrine metaplasia, usual ductal hyperplasia and lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) showed enhanced AP-2β expression. Cases of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) were more often AP-2β-negative (P<0.001). In invasive BC cohorts, AP-2β-positivity was associated with the lobular BC subtype (P<0.001), loss of E-cadherin (P<0.001), a positive estrogen receptor (ER) status (P<0.001), low Ki67 (P<0.001), low/intermediate Oncotype DX recurrence scores (P<0.001), and prolonged event-free survival (P=0.003). BCs from GEM models were all AP-2β-negative. In human BC cell lines, AP-2β expression was independent from ER-signaling. SiRNA-mediated inhibition of AP-2β diminished proliferation of lobular BC cell lines in vitro. In summary, AP-2β is a new mammary epithelial differentiation marker. Its expression is preferentially retained and enhanced in LCIS and invasive lobular BC and has prognostic implications. Our findings indicate that AP-2β controls tumor cell proliferation in this slow-growing BC subtype.
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Main
The activator protein-2 (AP-2) family of transcription factors comprises five members (AP-2α, -2β, -2γ, -2δ, -2ɛ), which are encoded by separate genes (TFAP2A, TFAP2B, TFAP2C, TFAP2D, TFAP2E).1 AP-2 proteins bind GC-rich DNA sequences and mediate both activating and repressive stimuli. AP-2 proteins function in a cell type-specific manner and regulate embryonic organ development, differentiation and tissue homeostasis. During embryogenesis, AP-2α, AP-2β, and AP-2γ display partially overlapping expression patterns in the nervous system, the facial mesenchyme, the limbs and various epithelia.1, 2, 3, 4 AP-2δ and AP-2ɛ are restricted to the central nervous system.5 AP-2 knock-out studies in mice have documented lethal phenotypes with different developmental abnormalities related to premature differentiation or unbalanced apoptosis.1
The human TFAP2B gene is primarily known for its association with the Char syndrome, an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by patent ductus arteriosus, facial dysmorphism and anatomical abnormalities of the fifth digit.6 Genetic analyses in Char syndrome siblings have revealed TFAP2B missense mutations.6 A common TFAP2B polymorphism (rs987237) is associated with obesity.7 More recently, TFAP2B has been implicated in neoplastic diseases.8, 9, 10, 11, 12 TFAP2B is overexpressed in alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (aRMS), a rare childhood malignancy.8 Approximately 80% of aRMSs harbor translocations t(2;13) or t(1;13), which juxtapose the PAX3 or PAX7 gene with FOXO1. The PAX3-FOXO1 fusion protein induces TFAP2B, which is its direct downstream effector and drives aRMS growth by anti-apoptotic signals.9 Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) for FOXO1 rearrangement and/or immunohistochemical detection of TFAP2B/AP-2β with the H-87 antibody is recommended for the diagnosis of aRMS.8, 12
Regarding AP-2 transcription factors in the mammary gland and breast cancer (BC), most studies have focused on TFAP2A/AP-2α and TFAP2C/AP-2γ.13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 In the normal mammary epithelium, TFAP2A/AP-2α is expressed throughout the luminal epithelial cell layer, while TFAP2C/AP-2γ is confined to myoepithelial cells.16 In BC, TFAP2C (chromosome 20q13) is occasionally co-amplified with HER2 (chromosome 17q21) and these tumors are addicted to TFAP2C/AP-2γ expression.19 In estrogen receptor (ER)-positive/HER2-negative BC, TFAP2C/AP-2γ is inducible through estrogenic stimulation and represses the cyclin-dependant kinase inhibitor CDKN1A/p21waf by direct interaction with the CDKN1A promoter.15, 17, 18 Thereby, TFAP2C/AP-2γ supports estrogen-dependent cell proliferation.18 Enhanced expression of TFAP2C/AP-2γ, detected by immunohistochemistry, is an independent predictor of poor patient outcome following anti-hormone monotherapy.17 Compared with TFAP2C/AP-2γ, little is known about TFAP2B/AP-2β expression in the mammary gland. However, various prognostic BC gene expression signatures, such as the 496 intrinsic gene set, include TFAP2B as a classifier gene.20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 Moreover, we have recently observed strongly enhanced TFAP2B expression in a cell line derived from a human infiltrating lobular BC (ILBC).26 Although TFAP2B/AP-2β is an established oncogenic factor and diagnostic marker for aRMS,8, 9 its role in other tumor entities has remained essentially unexplored. This study investigates TFAP2B/AP-2β expression and function with special reference to breast cancer.
Materials and methods
Tissue Specimens
Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues included: (i) n=328 adult normal tissues corresponding to n=41 different tissue types and n=244 benign/malignant tumors corresponding to n=31 different entities, all compiled on tissue microarrays (TMAs) (Supplementary Figure 1), (ii) n=99 whole-slide sections representing normal mammary gland, various reactive changes, pre-invasive neoplastic lesions and invasive BC, obtained from reduction mammoplasties and surgery for BC (Table 1), (iii) n=183 previously characterized human primary BCs from the Hannover Medical School, compiled on TMAs (MHH cohort) (Supplementary Table 1),27 (iv) n=2232 human primary ER-positive/HER2-negative ductal (BC of the unspecific type according to the WHO) or lobular BCs from the West German Study Group’s (WSG) clinical trial ‘PlanB’ (NCT01049425),28 compiled on TMAs (Supplementary Table 2), (v) n=114 mouse tissue specimens including normal mammary gland and various mouse BCs from six different genetically engineered models (GEMs) (Supplementary Table 3).29, 30, 31, 32 Moreover, tissue specimens included fresh-frozen and formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples of an aRMS harboring a FOXO1 rearrangement and a human whole-mount embryo (8 weeks gestational age) obtained with a hysterectomy in graviditate (undertaken for a large uterine leiomyoma). All human tissue specimens were retrieved from the tissue archive of the Hannover Medical School (MHH) according to the guidelines of the local ethics committee.
Immunohistochemistry and TMAs
Tissue microarrays containing 1.4 mm (diameter) core biopsies from representative areas of standard FFPE tissue blocks were constructed as described previously.27, 33 For detection of AP-2β, 4 μm sections of TMAs or FFPE tissue blocks were mounted on superfrost slides (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). Slides were deparaffinized and rehydrated conventionally. Staining was performed on a Benchmark Ultra (Ventana, Tucson, AZ, USA) automated stainer using the CC1 mild protocol for antigen retrieval, the rabbit polyclonal anti-AP-2β antibody H-87 (1:250, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX, USA)8 and the ultraView DAB kit (Ventana) for signal detection. Nuclear AP-2β staining was evaluated using an immunoreactivity score (IRS) as described by Remmele and Stegener.34 Tumors with an IRS ≤2 were considered as AP-2β-negative, whereas those with an IRS ≥3 were considered AP-2β positive. Additional antibodies and staining protocols are detailed in Supplementary Tables 4 and 5.
Double Immunofluorescence
For AP-2β/p63 double immunofluorescence staining, 2 μm sections of FFPE tissue blocks were deparaffinized and rehydrated conventionally and were incubated with the rabbit polyclonal anti-AP-2β antibody H-87 (1:100, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and the mouse monoclonal anti-p63 antibody 4A4 (1:100, Zytomed Systems, Berlin, Germany). After blocking with 3% bovine serum albumin (BSA) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), slides were incubated with secondary goat anti-rabbit antibodies labeled with Alexa Fluor 488 and goat anti-mouse antibodies labeled with Alexa Fluor 546. Cells were counterstained with Hoechst 33342 (1 μg/ml, Thermo Fisher Scientific). Visualization was performed with the Mantra Qualitative Pathology Workstation (PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA, USA).
Quantitative Real-Time RT-PCR
Extraction of total RNA from FFPE BC specimens and BC cell lines was performed as described previously.27 The cDNA synthesis was carried out with MultiScribe reverse transcriptase (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, USA). Quantitative assessment of gene expression normalized to two housekeeping genes (GUSB and TBP) was performed with Platinum Taq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA), Sybr Green I (Thermo Fisher Scientic) and QuantiTect® primer assays (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) on an ABI Prism 7700 system (Applied Biosystems). Significance of gene expression differences was determined with the Mann–Whitney test and GraphPad Prism software (version 5.00, La Jolla, CA, USA).
Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization
For FISH, 4 μm sections of FFPE tissue blocks were mounted on superfrost slides. FISH was performed using a commercially available break-apart dual color probe for the FOXO1 gene (Zytolight Spec FOXO1 Dual Color Break Apart Probe, Zytovision, Bremerhaven, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions. One hundred non-overlapping tumor cells were examined for split signals using an Axio Imager Z1 fluorescence microscope (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany).
Cell Culture
The human BC cell lines MDA-MB-134, MDA-MB-361, UACC-893, BT-474, CAL-51, and IPH-926 have been described previously.35, 36, 37, 38 All cell lines were authenticated by short tandem repeat profiling.39 MDA-MB-134 and IPH-926 cells were additionally authenticated by detection of their unique, homozygous CDH1 mutations, as described previously.40 All cell lines were routinely cultured in RPMI-1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, 10 μg/ml bovine insulin, 2.5 g/l glucose, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, 2 mM glutamine, and 10 mM HEPES, in a water-saturated atmosphere containing 5% CO2 at 37.5 °C. Cell cultures were routinely surveyed to rule out mycoplasma contamination using a PCR-based detection system, as described by Uphoff et al.41 For assessment of a potential ER-dependent modulation of TFAP2B expression, estrogen-responsive BC cells were treated with the ER-antagonist ICI 182,780 (Fulvestrant, Tocris, Bristol, UK) at 1 μM for 48 h, as described previously.27 For assessment of a potential E-Cadherin-dependent modulation of TFAP2B expression, E-cadherin-defective IPH-926 cells were transiently transfected with the p-wtEcad-EGFP-N2 expression construct encoding for full-length wild-type human E-cadherin fused to the cDNA sequence of EGFP, as described previously.42, 43 Transfection reactions were carried out with Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) according to manufacturer’s recommendations. For inhibition of AP-2β protein expression, BC cells were exposed to small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) targeting TFAP2B (si-TFAP2B, SMARTpool ON-TARGETplus, Dharmacon, Lafayette, CO, USA). In brief, cells were seeded in 24 well plates at a density of 5 × 104 cells per well and were allowed to adhere overnight. Next, transient transfection of si-TFAP2B (25 nM) was performed with Dharmafect 2 Transfection Reagent (Dharmacon) according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. Knockdown of AP-2β protein expression was confirmed by Western blot 72 h after the onset of transfection. As a control, cells were transfected with pooled non-targeting siRNAs (si-con, ON-TARGETplus Non-targeting Pool, Dharmacon).
Affymetrix Gene Expression Data
Affymetrix U133Plus2.0 GeneChip raw data of n=20 human BC cell lines (GEO GSE28089, GSE12777) were compiled and analyzed for TFAP2 family members using Expression Console and BRB-array tools software as described previously.26
Western Blot
Cells were lysed in RIPA buffer. 20 μg total cellular proteins were separated by 12% SDS-PAGE and were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. Membranes were probed with anti-AP-2β (H-87, 1:1000, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and anti–β-actin antibodies (AC15, 1:2000, Acris, Hiddenhausen, Germany) as described previously.44 Lysates of 293 T cells transfected with TFAP2B, TFAP2A, TFAP2C expression plasmids obtained comercially served as controls (sc-113759, sc-113722, sc-116386, Santa Cruz Biotechnology).
Cell Viability Assay
Relative cell proliferation was determined with the WST-1 assay (Roche, Mannheim, Germany) in 96-well culture plates as described previously.40 For cell cycle analysis, cells were fixed in 70% ice-cold ethanol and were treated by RNAase A (50 mg/ml; Roche). Cells were stained in PBS/2 mM EDTA/0.1% Triton-X-100 containing 20 mg/ml propidium iodide (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) 30 min before analysis on FACS Calibur flow cytometer.40
Statistics
Association of AP-2β expression with clinicopathological factors in primary BC specimens was assessed using the χ2-test, the χ2-test for trends, Fisher’s exact test and GraphPad Prism software (version 5.00). Event-free survival was analyzed using log-rank test (Mantel–Cox) and SPSS (version 23).
Results
H-87 is Suitable for Specific Immunodetection of AP-2β
To confirm the specificity of the H-87 anti-AP-2β antibody, 293 T cells transfected with TFAP2A, TFAP2B, or TFAP2C were analyzed by immunoblotting. The H-87 antibody reacted only with 293 T-TFAP2B cell lysate (Figure 1a). Next, H-87 immunoreactivity was assessed in an aRMS. FOXO1 rearrangement was confirmed by FISH. Immunoblotting of fresh-frozen tissue revealed a strong protein band of ~50 kDa (Figure 1b). This is consistent with the molecular weight of AP-2β (47 kDa) and its aberrant overexpression in FOXO1-rearranged aRMS.8, 9, 12 Immunostaining of FFPE tissue of this aRMS showed strong nuclear reactivity, which is in line with the function of AP-2β as a transcription factor (Figure 1c). To further demonstrate the utility of the H-87 antibody, a human FFPE whole-mount embryo (8 weeks gestational age) was subjected to immunostaining (Figure 1d). Immunoreactive tissues matched with the known embryonic TFAP2B expression pattern. In detail, H-87 immunoreactivity was observed in embryonic epidermis, renal tubules, facial mesenchyme, mid brain and in the oral cavity mucosa, including the upper but not the lower side of the tongue (Figure 1e).2 This is consistent with previous data obtained by mRNA in situ hybridization (Supplementary Table 6).2 Taken together, H-87 is suitable for specific immunodetection of AP-2β protein in FFPE tissues.
AP-2β Expression is Limited to Few Adult Normal Tissues and Tumor Entities
Next, n=41 different human adult normal tissue types and n=31 related tumor entities were screened for AP-2β expression using TMAs (Supplementary Figure 1). AP-2β-positive tissues included mammary gland, kidney, salivary gland, epidermis and squamous epithelium of the esophagus. In the epidermis and esophagus, nuclear AP-2β expression was confined to the basal epithelial cell layer (Supplementary Figure 1). Very faint, cytoplasmic immunoreactivity was occasionally observed in endothelial cells, and was considered unspecific. As expected, AP-2β-positive tumor entities included aRMS, but also pleomorphic adenoma of the salivary gland and basal cell carcinoma of the skin. Variable AP-2β expression was observed in invasive BCs. Hence, AP-2β expression was limited to comparatively few adult normal tissues and tumor entities (<15% of those tested), including the mammary gland and BC.
AP-2β Expression in the Normal Mammary Gland and in Pre-Invasive Neoplastic Lesions
To characterize AP-2β expression in the mammary gland in more detail, n=99 breast whole-slide sections ranging from normal histology to reactive changes, pre-invasive neoplastic lesions and invasive BC were selected for immunohistochemistry (Table 1). The normal epithelium of both ducts and lobules showed a scattered staining pattern (Figure 2a). Approximately one third of mammary epithelial cells stained positive for AP-2β (labeling fraction 0.32 ±0.11). A subset of strongly AP-2β-positive cells was interspersed in the luminal cell layer or was positioned between luminal and basal cells (Figure 2a). Weak immunoreactivity was also seen in some cells of the basal cell layer. However, the strongly AP-2β-positive mammary epithelial cells clearly lacked the myoepithelial marker p63, as determined by double immunofluorescence staining (Figure 2b). Enhanced AP-2β expression in terms of an expansion of AP-2β-positive cells was evident in various reactive, metaplastic and benign lesions. These included apocrine metaplasia, usual ductal hyperplasia, the epithelium of fibroadenomas and benign phyllodes tumors, but not pregnancy-related secretory transformation (Figure 3). All nineteen (19/19) lobular carcinomas in situ (LCIS) were AP-2β-positive, but seven of twenty-one (7/21) ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS) were AP-2β-negative (P<0.001) (Table 1). Likewise, invasive lobular breast cancer (ILBC) showed a strong and uniform AP-2β immunoreactivity in all nuclei, corresponding to an IRS of 12, while invasive ductal breast cancer (IDBC, BC of the unspecific type according to the WHO) showed variable staining characteristics (Figure 3). Occasionally, the normal mammary epithelium adjacent to invasive BC showed a marked luminal expansion of AP-2β-positive cells (Figure 4).
AP-2β is Associated with ILBC and Prolonged Event-Free Survival in Clinical BC Cohorts
Next, AP-2β was assessed in two clinical cohorts of invasive BC compiled on TMAs. The first collection (MHH cohort) included n=183 primary BCs (Supplementary Table 1). Using an IRS of ≥3 as a cutoff to define AP-2β-positivity, 61% of BCs were AP-2β-positive (Figure 5a). A positive AP-2β status was associated with ILBC (P<0.001) (Table 2). Moreover, AP-2β expression was associated with a positive ER, AR, and BCL2 status, a low Ki67 index, loss of E-cadherin, lack of CK5/14 and absence of nuclear p53 accumulation (Figure 5a; Table 2). Similar results were obtained using different IRS cutoffs to define AP-2β-positivity (data not shown). To substantiate these findings, a subset of n=26 cases of this series was subjected to quantitative real-time RT-PCR confirming higher TFAP2B mRNA expression in AP-2β-positive cases (Figure 5b). Quantitative real-time RT-PCR also confirmed higher TFAP2B mRNA expression in ILBC compared with normal mammary gland tissue and IDBC (Figure 5b).
Features associated with AP-2β in the MHH cohort were characteristic for the luminal molecular BC subtype. As most ILBCs belong to the luminal subtype,22, 45, 46 association of AP-2β with ILBC may rather reflect the restricted molecular diversity of this special tumor entity. To test this, AP-2β was evaluated in a second clinical cohort of invasive BCs comprising >3000 cases analyzed for disease-free survival as the official study endpoint (WSG PlanB trial).47 Of note, only ER-positive/HER2-negative BCs of either ductal or lobular histological type with available AP-2β status (n=2232) were retained for this refined analysis (Supplementary Table 2). Again, AP-2β-positivity was associated with ILBC (P<0.001) (Table 3). A significant association of AP-2β-positivity with ILBC was also observed, if the BC samples were limited to ER-positive/HER2-negative cases with a Ki67 index of ≤10%, which corresponds to the luminal-A BC subset (data not shown). Moreover, AP-2β was associated with a pN0 status, low Ki67 index and low/intermediate Oncotype-DX recurrence scores (all P<0.001) (Table 3). In a preliminary analysis of clinical follow-up data available for n=1747 enrolled patients (univariate analysis, median follow-up of 34 months, without delimitation of treatment modalities), AP-2β was associated with prolonged event-free survival (P=0.003) (Figure 5c). Interestingly, the relationship between histological grade and AP-2β expression was different for ILBC and IDBC. In IDBC, AP-2β-positivity rates declined with higher histological grade (Figure 5d). In ILBC, AP-2β-positivity rates remained at a high level in poorly differentiated (G3) cases (Figure 5d). Consistently, AP-2β-positivity was associated with prolonged event-free survival only in IDBC (P=0.004), but not ILBC (P=0.292) (Supplementary Figure 2).
Lack of AP-2β Expression in BCs from GEM Models
The anti-AP-2β antibody H-87 was raised against amino acids 130-216 of the AP-2β protein. This protein domain shows 100% homology between human and mouse AP-2β. Hence, H-87 is also suitable for immunodetection of mouse AP-2β. The mammary epithelium of juvenile and adult female mice showed interspersed AP-2β-positive cells. These staining characteristics resembled the human mammary gland. However, n=104 mouse BCs from six different GEM models (Wsv40-T-ag, MMTVcre;Pik3caH1047R, Wcre;Pik3caH1047R, Wcre;Trp53F/F, Wcre;Trp53F/F;Cdh1F/F, Wcre;Cdh1F/F; PtenF/F) were all AP-2β-negative, including mouse lobular carcinomas (Supplementary Figure 3).
AP-2β Expression in Human BC Cell Lines
Next, human BC cell lines were utilized to study AP-2β. Based on previously described Affymetrix microarray gene expression data,26, 37 n=6 BC cell lines with differential TFAP2B expression were selected for further experiments (Supplementary Figure 4). Consistent with microarray data, quantitative real-time RT-PCR, immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry confirmed TFAP2B/AP-2β expression in MDA-MB-361, MDA-MB-134, and IPH-926, while UACC-893, BT-474 and CAL-51 were TFAP2B/AP-2β-negative (Figure 6a and b). Of note, TFAP2B mRNA levels were higher in TFAP2B-positive BC cell lines compared with TFAP2B-positive primary BCs. Consistent with the association of AP-2β with ILBC observed in the two clinical BC cohorts, ILBC cell lines (MDA-MB-134 and IPH-926) were AP-2β-positive (Figures 6a and b).
AP-2β is Independent from ER-Signaling and Contributes to Cell Proliferation
The association of AP-2β with a positive ER status in primary BCs could be a consequence of ER-dependent transcriptional activation of TFAP2B/AP-2β. In fact, TFAP2C/AP-2γ, another member of the AP-2 family, is an ER-responsive gene.15 To test for an ER-dependent expression of TFAP2B/AP-2β, hormone-responsive ER-positive/AP-2β-positive BC cell lines (MDA-MB-361 and MDA-MB-134) were exposed to the ER-antagonist ICI 182,780 (Fulvestrant). ICI 182,780 efficiently inhibits expression of ER-responsive genes and thereby blocks cell proliferation.27, 48 Appropriate cell stimulation with ICI 182,780 was verified by flow cytometric cell cycle analysis, as described previously (data not shown).27 However, AP-2β protein expression was not affected by ICI 182,780 (Figure 6c). AP-2β protein expression was also not modulated by cell culture density (Figure 6d). Moreover, reconstitution of E-cadherin in ILBC cells did not alter AP-2β expression (Figure 6e). Hence, AP-2β expression is independent from cell culture density, E-cadherin or ER-signaling in human BC cell lines.
In aRMS, AP-2β is an established oncogenic factor, which drives tumor growth by anti-apoptotic signals.9 Ebauer et al. reported that siRNA-mediated inhibition of AP-2β induces apoptosis in aRMS cells in vitro.9 To test for a similar function of AP-2β in BC, we sought to study the impact of siRNAs directed against TFAP2B (si-TFAP2B) in human BC cell lines. Immunoblotting confirmed knockdown of AP-2β in response to si-TFAP2B exposure (Figure 7a). As expected, si-TFAP2B exposure did not affect the growth of AP-2β-negative BC cell lines (UACC-893, BT-474, CAL-51). In contrast, si-TFAP2B diminished the growth of all AP-2β-positive BC cell lines tested, including ILBC cell lines (MDA-MB-134 and IPH-926) (Figure 7b). Flow cytometric cell cycle analyses showed that the growth-inhibitory effect of si-TFAP2B was associated with a marginally increased G0/G1-phase fraction and a reduced S-phase fraction, but not with an excess of sub-G1/apoptotic cells (Figure 7c). Hence, AP-2β controls cell proliferation, but does not function as an anti-apoptotic factor in BC, as has been reported for aRMS.9
Discussion
Transcription factor TFAP2B/AP-2β regulates embryonic organ development and its aberrant overexpression is implicated in aRMS.8, 9, 12 Little is known about TFAP2B/AP-2β expression and function in other tumor entities, including BC. However, TFAP2B is part of various classifier gene lists devised for BC subtyping and prognostication.20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 This is the first study which provides a detailed characterization of AP-2β expression and function with special reference to the mammary gland and BC.
Comparatively few adult normal tissues showed AP-2β protein expression. Interestingly, AP-2β was detected in the basal epithelial cell layer of the epidermis and squamous epithelium of the esophagus, suggesting a role of AP-2β in the stem cell compartment in these tissues. In the normal mammary gland, AP-2β showed a scattered expression pattern. Thus, the AP-2β expression pattern differed from the staining pattern reported for AP-2α (entire luminal cell layer) and AP-2γ (entire myoepithelial cell layer).16 Various reactive, metaplastic and pre-invasive neoplastic mammary gland lesions showed enhanced AP-2β expression in terms of an expansion of the AP-2β-positive cell population. Previously reported microarray gene expression data have listed TFAP2B among the genes upregulated in hyperplastic/metaplastic mammary epithelium.49 It is likely, that the previously reported upregulation of TFAP2B mRNA in such lesions corresponds to an expansion of the AP-2β-positive cell population, as described in the present work. A particularly intense and uniform staining for AP-2β was noted in LCIS. Cases of DCIS were more often AP-2β-negative. Hence, AP-2β is a mammary epithelial differentiation marker and various reactive mammary gland lesions and BC precursors, especially LCIS, are characterized by enhanced AP-2β expression.
In invasive BC, AP-2β expression was associated with ILBC. This is in line with few previously reported microarray gene expression data sets.22, 24 AP-2β was also associated with a positive ER status, low proliferative activity, low/intermediate Oncotype-DX recurrence scores and other important clinicopathological characteristics. In a large clinical BC cohort (WSG PlanB trial) restricted to ER-positive/HER2-negative cases, AP-2β was still associated with ILBC. This highlights that the tight association of AP-2β with ILBC was not simply due to the high frequency of ER-positive cases or the common luminal molecular subtype in this special BC entity. Consistent with the overall favorable clinicopathological characteristics associated with AP-2β, clinical follow-up data documented a prolonged event-free survival for AP-2β-positive BC. Accordingly, AP-2β is not only a mammary epithelial differentiation marker, but has also prognostic implications in BC. However, additional analyses including 5-year follow-up data and delimitation of different treatment modalities are warranted and underway to further explore the prognostic implications of AP-2β expression in BC. Furthermore, additional studies regarding the role of AP-2β in HER2-positive BC, which were underrepresented in the present study focusing on ER-positive/HER2-negative BC, are warranted. Irrespective of these considerations, a very unusual relationship was observed between AP-2β expression and histological grade. AP-2β-positivity rates declined with higher histological grade in IDBC, but not in ILBC. ILBCs retained AP-2β expression even in poorly differentiated (G3) cases. This further indicates a special role of AP-2β in ILBC.
Contrary to human BCs, mouse BCs from GEM models were all AP-2β-negative. Lack of AP-2β expression in mouse BCs, including mouse lobular carcinomas, may have several reasons. This might reflect species-specific physiological differences just as the absence of ER and PR expression in conditional mouse BC models.38 Another possible explanation is that promoter elements driving Cre recombinase expression (MMTV, K14, WAP) target an AP-2β-negative precursor cell. This however, is beyond the scope of the present work.
To study AP-2β on a functional level, we utilized human BC cell lines. TFAP2B/AP-2β mRNA and protein expression was detected in a subset of BC cell lines. All AP-2β-positive cell lines were derived from initially ER-positive carcinomas. Two of the AP-2β-positive cell lines were derived from ILBC (MDA-MB-134 and IPH-926). These ILBC cell lines display moderate or slow in vitro growth characteristics.35, 38 Accordingly, MDA-MB-134 and IPH-926 reflect the features of prototypic AP-2β-positive primary BCs, as observed in our clinical tumor cohorts. This qualifies MDA-MB-134 and IPH-926 as appropriate models for studying AP-2β function in BC, especially in the context of ILBC. Interestingly, IPH-926 corresponds to a G3-differentiated ILBC-relapse, which had undergone transition to a secondary ER-negative phenotype but it retained AP-2β expression.35, 38, 40 This suggests that ER-signaling is dispensable for AP-2β expression. Consistently, inhibition of ER-signaling by ICI 182,780 in MDA-MB-134 failed to suppress AP-2β. This provides additional evidence that AP-2β expression is independent from ER-signaling in ILBC. Enhanced expression of AP-2β in apocrine metaplasia and the association of AP-2β with AR-positive BCs observed in the MHH cohort might suggest an AR-dependent expression of AP-2β. However, a previously published profiling of AR-induced target genes in an appropriate BC cell model showed that TFAP2B expression is independent from AR-signaling.50 Moreover, AR-induced expression of AP-2β might not explain the AP-2β-positive phenotype of IPH-926 lobular BC cells, since this cell line lacks AR expression.26
Alternatively, AP-2β expression might reflect a cellular origin from an AP-2β-positive mammary epithelial precursor cell, but may have limited functional relevance for tumor growth. However, since siRNAs directed against TFAP2B induce apoptosis in aRMS cells,9 we evaluated the impact of AP-2β inhibition in BC cell lines. SiRNAs directed against TFAP2B diminished in vitro growth of all AP-2β-positive BC cell lines tested. This growth-inhibitory effect was not associated with increased apoptotic cell death, but with an increased fraction of cells in the G0/G1-phase of the cell cycle. Therefore, AP-2β expression and function is at least partially different in aRMS and BC. In aRMS, AP-2β is aberrantly induced by PAX3-FOXO1 fusion proteins in a presumably AP-2β-negative mesenchymal precursor cell and exerts critical anti-apoptotic signals in this cellular context.8, 9, 12 In BC, AP-2β expression seems to have its origin in an AP-2β-positive mammary epithelial precursor cell and it contributes to cell proliferation. In summary, AP-2β is a mammary epithelial differentiation marker and its expression is preferentially retained in LCIS and lobular BC. Our findings indicate that AP-2β controls cell proliferation in this slow-growing BC subtype.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Claudia von Schilling breast cancer research junior award granted to MC.
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Supplementary Information accompanies the paper on the Laboratory Investigation website
This study shows that transcription factor AP-2β (TFAP2B) is a differentiation marker, which is expressed in a subpopulation of cells in the human mammary epithelium. In neoplastic breast lesions, TFAP2B is associated with a favorable clinical outcome and in situ and invasive lobular breast cancer. Functional analyses in lobular breast cancer cell lines indicate that TFAP2B controls tumor cell proliferation of this breast cancer subtype.
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Raap, M., Gronewold, M., Christgen, H. et al. Lobular carcinoma in situ and invasive lobular breast cancer are characterized by enhanced expression of transcription factor AP-2β. Lab Invest 98, 117–129 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2017.106
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2017.106
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