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Abstract
Background
Up to 23% of breast cancer patients recurred within a decade after trastuzumab treatment. Conversely, one trial found that patients with low HER2 expression and metastatic breast cancer had a positive response to trastuzumab-deruxtecan (T-Dxd). This indicates that relying solely on HER2 as a single diagnostic marker to predict the efficacy of anti-HER2 drugs is insufficient. This study highlights the interaction between histamine N-methyltransferase (HNMT) and HER2 as an adjunct predictor for trastuzumab response. Furthermore, modulation of HER2 expression by HNMT may explain why those with low HER2 expression still respond to T-Dxd.
Methods
We investigated the impact of HNMT protein expression on the efficacy of anti-HER2 therapy in both in vivo and ex vivo models of patient-derived xenografts and cell line-derived xenografts. Our analysis included Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) to assess the interaction strength between HNMT and HER2 proteins in trastuzumab-resistant and sensitive tumor tissues. Additionally, we used fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM), cleaved luciferase, and immunoprecipitation to study the interaction dynamics of HNMT and HER2. Furthermore, we evaluated the influence of HNMT activity on the binding of anti-HER2 antibodies to their targets through flow cytometry. We also observed the nuclear translocation of HNMT/HER2-ICD cells using fluorescent double staining and DeltaVision microscopy. Finally, ChIP sequencing was employed to identify target genes affected by the HNMT/HER2-ICD complex.
Results
This study highlights HNMT as a potential auxiliary biomarker for diagnosing HER2 + breast cancer. FRET analysis demonstrated a significant interaction between HNMT and HER2 protein in trastuzumab-sensitive tumor tissue (n = 50), suggesting the potential of HNMT as a predictor of treatment response. Mechanistic studies revealed that the interaction between HNMT and HER2 contributes to increased HER2 protein expression at the transcriptional level, thereby impacting the efficacy of anti-HER2 therapy. Furthermore, a subset of triple-negative breast cancers characterized by HNMT overexpression was found to be sensitive to HER2 antibody–drug conjugates such as T-Dxd.
Conclusions
These findings offer crucial insights for clinicians evaluating candidates for anti-HER2 therapy, especially for HER2-low breast cancer patients who could gain from T-Dxd treatment. Identifying HNMT expression could help clinicians pinpoint patients who would benefit from anti-HER2 therapy.
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