- He, Aina;
- Tian, Songhai;
- Kopper, Oded;
- Horan, Daniel;
- Chen, Peng;
- Bronson, Roderick;
- Sheng, Ren;
- Wu, Hao;
- Sui, Lufei;
- Zhou, Kun;
- Tao, Liang;
- Wu, Quan;
- Huang, Yujing;
- Shen, Zan;
- Han, Sen;
- Chen, Xueqing;
- Chen, Hong;
- He, Xi;
- Robling, Alexander;
- Jin, Rongsheng;
- Clevers, Hans;
- Xiang, Dongxi;
- Li, Zhe;
- Dong, Min
Wnt signaling pathways are transmitted via 10 homologous frizzled receptors (FZD1-10) in humans. Reagents broadly inhibiting Wnt signaling pathways reduce growth and metastasis of many tumors, but their therapeutic development has been hampered by the side effect. Inhibitors targeting specific Wnt-FZD pair(s) enriched in cancer cells may reduce side effect, but the therapeutic effect of narrow-spectrum Wnt-FZD inhibitors remains to be established in vivo. Here, we developed a fragment of C. difficile toxin B (TcdBFBD), which recognizes and inhibits a subclass of FZDs, FZD1/2/7, and examined whether targeting this FZD subgroup may offer therapeutic benefits for treating breast cancer models in mice. Utilizing 2 basal-like and 1 luminal-like breast cancer models, we found that TcdBFBD reduces tumor-initiating cells and attenuates growth of basal-like mammary tumor organoids and xenografted tumors, without damaging Wnt-sensitive tissues such as bones in vivo. Furthermore, FZD1/2/7-positive cells are enriched in chemotherapy-resistant cells in both basal-like and luminal mammary tumors treated with cisplatin, and TcdBFBD synergizes strongly with cisplatin in inhibiting both tumor types. These data demonstrate the therapeutic value of narrow-spectrum Wnt signaling inhibitor in treating breast cancers.