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Vol. 1, 575-583, June 2002     Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
© 2002 American Association for Cancer Research

Reversion of RhoC GTPase-induced Inflammatory Breast Cancer Phenotype by Treatment with a Farnesyl Transferase Inhibitor1

Kenneth L. van Golen, LiWei Bao, Melinda M. DiVito, ZhiFen Wu, George C. Prendergast and Sofia D. Merajver2

Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology [K. L. v. G., L. B., M. M. D., Z. W., S. D. M.], and Comprehensive Cancer Center [K. L. v. G., L. B., Z. W., S. D. M.], University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109; The Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 [G. C. P.]; and Glenolden Laboratory, The DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company, Wilmington, Delaware 19898 [G. C. P.]

Inflammatory breast carcinoma (IBC) is a highly aggressive form of locally advanced breast cancer that has the ability to invade and block the dermal lymphatics of the skin overlying the breast. In a previous series of studies, our laboratory identified overexpression of RhoC GTPase in >90% of IBCs (K. L. van Golen et al., Clin. Cancer Res., 5: 2511–2519, 1999) and defined RhoC as a mammary oncogene involved in conferring the metastatic phenotype (K. L. van Golen et al., Cancer Res., 60: 5832–5838, 2000). RhoC GTPase is involved in cytoskeletal reorganization during cellular motility. Farnesyl transferase inhibitors (FTIs) were previously shown to be effective in modulating tumor growth in Ras-transformed tumor cells. Recently, studies have focused on RhoB as a putative non-Ras target of FTI action. In the present study, we assessed the effect of the FTI L-744,832 on RhoC-overexpressing IBC and RhoC-transfected human mammary epithelial (HME-RhoC) cells. Treatment of the SUM149 IBC cell line and HME-RhoC transfectants with the FTI L-744,832 led to reversion of the RhoC-induced phenotype, manifested by a significant decrease in anchorage-independent growth, motility, and invasion. Although RhoC expression and activation were not affected, RhoB levels were increased by FTI treatment. Transient transfection of geranylgeranylated RhoB (RhoB-GG) into the same cells reproduced the effects of the FTI, thus suggesting that FTI-induced reversion of the RhoC phenotype may be mediated by an increase in RhoB-GG levels. These data provide direct evidence that FTIs may find use in the clinic when directed against RhoC-overexpressing tumors and suggest appropriate biological markers to evaluate during FTI treatment.




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