A trafficking regulatory subnetwork governs αVβ6 integrin-HER2 cross-talk to control breast cancer invasion and drug resistance | Science Advances
Abstract
HER2 and α
V
β
6
integrin are independent predictors of breast cancer survival and metastasis. We identify an α
V
β
6
/HER2 cross-talk mechanism driving invasion, which is dysregulated in drug-resistant HER2+ breast cancer cells. Proteomic analyses reveal ligand-bound α
V
β
6
recruits HER2 and a trafficking subnetwork, comprising guanosine triphosphatases RAB5 and RAB7A and the Rab regulator guanine nucleotide dissociation inhibitor 2 (GDI2). The RAB5/RAB7A/GDI2 functional module mediates direct cross-talk between α
V
β
6
and HER2, affecting receptor trafficking and signaling. Acute exposure to trastuzumab increases recruitment of the subnetwork to α
V
β
6
, but trastuzumab resistance decouples GDI2 recruitment. GDI2, RAB5, and RAB7A cooperate to regulate migration and transforming growth factor–β activation to promote invasion. However, these mechanisms are dysregulated in trastuzumab-resistant cells. In patients,
RAB5A
,
RAB7A
, and
GDI2
expression correlates with patient survival and α
V
β
6
expression predicts relapse following trastuzumab treatment. Thus, the RAB5/RAB7A/GDI2 subnetwork regulates α
V
β
6
-HER2 cross-talk to drive breast cancer invasion but is subverted in trastuzumab-resistant cells to drive α
V
β
6
-independent and HER2-independent tumor progression.