(616f) Probing the Spatiotemporal Attributes of Gamma-Secretase/Notch Signaling in Breast Cancer Microenvironments
AIChE Annual Meeting
2022
2022 Annual Meeting
Topical Conference: Chemical Engineers in Medicine
Engineering Cancer III: Devices for Diagnosis, Culturing, and Microenvironment Studies
Thursday, November 17, 2022 - 9:30am to 9:48am
We hypothesize that γ-secretase plays a major role in the control of Notch signaling in TNBC and contributes to this racial disparity. The emergence of Notch signaling as a therapeutic target of interest in TNBC has spurred interest in this pathway as a potential suspect in the racially disparate burden in TNBC. At this point, ethnic differences in Notch signaling and its role in the higher incidence of and poorer outcomes of African-americans from TNBC remain understudied. In this work we have characterized the Notch and γ-secretase pathways in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) lipid microenvironments using TNBC-proteoliposomes and TNBC specific lipid formulations in order to examine potential racial disparities at the molecular level in supported bilayer systems. We are comparing these results to our earlier studies of breast cancer cell lines using the same chemical biologic methods and γ-secretase inhibitors (GSIs) (Villa et al (2014) 8, 1077-1092) To further interpret and understand the spatiotemporal distribution and reporter staining patterns of γ-Secretase and the Notch substrates and fragments we have implemented spatial reaction-diffusion computational models. This method is being used to explain the spatial buildup/loading of the relevant signaling-involved molecules and this work will facilitate the examination of racial disparities in Notch and γ-secretase pathways at the molecular level in TNBC and will allow for the examination of how γ-secretase lipid microenvironment is coupled to the mechanism in the context of Notch signaling in TNBC. We believe that this work could lead to the basis for new racially-distinct therapeutic strategies based on γ-secretase inhibition characteristics.