AGTR1 overexpression defines a subset of breast cancer and confers sensitivity to losartan, an AGTR1 antagonist

Daniel R. Rhodes, Bushra Ateeq, Qi Cao, Scott A. Tomlins, Rohit Mehra, Bharathi Laxman, Shanker Kalyana-Sundaram, Robert J. Lonigro, Beth E. Helgeson, Mahaveer S. Bhojani, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Celina G. Kleer, Daniel F. Hayes, Peter C. Lucas, Sooryanarayana Varambally, Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

132 Scopus citations

Abstract

Breast cancer patients have benefited from the use of targeted therapies directed at specific molecular alterations. To identify additional opportunities for targeted therapy, we searched for genes with marked overexpression in subsets of tumors across a panel of breast cancer profiling studies comprising 3,200 microarray experiments. In addition to prioritizing ERBB2, we found AGTR1, the angiotensin II receptor type I, to be markedly overexpressed in 10-20% of breast cancer cases across multiple independent patient cohorts. Validation experiments confirmed that AGTR1 is highly overexpressed, in several cases more than 100-fold. AGTR1 overexpression was restricted to estrogen receptor-positive tumors and was mutually exclusive with ERBB2 overexpression across all samples. Ectopic overexpression of AGTR1 in primary mammary epithelial cells, combined with angiotensin II stimulation, led to a highly invasive phenotype that was attenuated by the AGTR1 antagonist losartan. Similarly, losartan reduced tumor growth by 30% in AGTR1-positive breast cancer xenografts. Taken together, these observations indicate that marked AGTR1 overexpression defines a subpopulation of ER-positive, ERBB2-negative breast cancer that may benefit from targeted therapy with AGTR1 antagonists, such as losartan.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)10284-10289
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume106
Issue number25
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 23 2009

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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