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A Novel Role for Brain and Acute Leukemia Cytoplasmic (BAALC) in Human Breast Cancer Metastasis

journal contribution
posted on 2025-07-30, 02:02 authored by M Birgersson, M Chi, C Miller, Joshua BrzozowskiJoshua Brzozowski, J Brown, L Schofield, OG Taylor, Elizabeth PearsallElizabeth Pearsall, J Hewitt, C Gedye, Lisa LinczLisa Lincz, Kathryn SkeldingKathryn Skelding
Brain and Acute Leukemia, Cytoplasmic (BAALC) is a protein that controls leukemia cell proliferation, differentiation, and survival and is overexpressed in several cancer types. The gene is located in the chromosomal region 8q22.3, an area commonly amplified in breast cancer and associated with poor prognosis. However, the expression and potential role of BAALC in breast cancer has not widely been examined. This study investigates BAALC expression in human breast cancers with the aim of determining if it plays a role in the pathogenesis of the disease. BAALC protein expression was examined by immunohistochemistry in breast cancer, and matched lymph node and normal breast tissue samples. The effect of gene expression on overall survival (OS), disease-free and distant metastasis free survival (DMFS) was assessed in silico using the Kaplan-Meier Plotter (n=3,935), the TCGA invasive breast carcinoma (n=960) and GOBO (n=821) data sets. Functional effects of BAALC expression on breast cancer proliferation, migration and invasion were determined in vitro. We demonstrate herein that BAALC expression is progressively increased in primary and breast cancer metastases when compared to normal breast tissue. Increased BAALC mRNA is associated with a reduction in DMFS and disease-free survival, but not OS, in breast cancer patients, even when corrected for tumor grade. We show that overexpression of BAALC in MCF-7 breast cancer cells increases the proliferation, anchorage-independent growth, invasion, and migration capacity of these cells. Conversely, siRNA knockdown of BAALC expression in Hs578T breast cancer cells decreases proliferation, invasion and migration. We identify that this BAALC associated migration and invasion is mediated by focal adhesion kinase (FAK)-dependent signaling and is accompanied by an increase in matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 but not MMP-2 activity in vitro. Our data demonstrate a novel function for BAALC in the control of breast cancer metastasis, offering a potential target for the generation of anti-cancer drugs to prevent breast cancer metastasis.

Funding

This work was supported by research funds from the Cure Cancer Australia Foundation, Tour de Cure, the Hunter Medical Research Institute, the Hunter Translational Cancer Research Centre, the Hunter Cancer Research Alliance, and the University of Newcastle.

Cure Cancer Australia Foundation

Tour de Cure

Hunter Medical Research Institute

Hunter Translational Cancer Research Centre

Hunter Cancer Research Alliance

University of Newcastle

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Journal title

Frontiers in Oncology

Location

Switzerland

Volume

11

Article number

ARTN 656120

Page count

12

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

Open access

  • Gold OA

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