- Mesenchymal stem cells drive paclitaxel resistance in ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells via paracrine of neuregulin 1.
Mesenchymal stem cells drive paclitaxel resistance in ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells via paracrine of neuregulin 1.
We had previously demonstrated that increased expression of ErbB3 is required for ErbB2-mediated paclitaxel resistance in breast cancer cells. In the present study, we have explored the possible role of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in regulating the paclitaxel-sensitivity of ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells. We show that human umbilical cord-derived MSCs express significantly higher level of neuregulin-1 as compared with ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells themselves. Coculture or treatment with conditioned medium of MSCs not only decreases the anti-proliferation effect of paclitaxel on ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells, but also significantly inhibits paclitaxel-induced apoptosis. We further demonstrate that this MSCs-drived paclitaxel resistance in ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells could be attributed to upregulation of Survivin via paracrine effect of NRG-1/ErbB3/PI-3K/Akt signaling, as either specific knockdown expression of ErbB3, or blocking of downstream PI-3K/Akt signaling, or specific inhibition of Survivin can completely reverse this effect. Moreover, targeted knockdown of NRG-1 expression in MSCs abrogates theirs effect on paclitaxel sensitivity of ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells. Taken together, our study indicate that paracrine of NRG-1 by MSCs induces paclitaxel resistance in ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer cells through PI-3K/Akt signaling-dependent upregulation of Survivin. Our findings suggest that simultaneously targeting mesenchymal stem cells in tumor microenvironment may be a novel strategy to overcome paclitaxel resistance in patients with ErbB2/ErbB3-coexpressing breast cancer.