The voltage gated Ca2+-channel Cav3.2 and therapeutic responses in breast cancer

Background Understanding the cause of therapeutic resistance and identifying new biomarkers in breast cancer to predict therapeutic responses will help optimise patient care. Calcium (Ca2+)-signalling is important in a variety of processes associated with tumour progression, including breast cancer cell migration and proliferation. Ca2+-signalling is also linked to the acquisition of multidrug resistance. This study aimed to assess the expression level of proteins involved in Ca2+-signalling in an in vitro model of trastuzumab-resistance and to assess the ability of identified targets to reverse resistance and/or act as potential biomarkers for prognosis or therapy outcome. Methods Expression levels of a panel of Ca2+-pumps, channels and channel regulators were assessed using RT-qPCR in resistant and sensitive age-matched SKBR3 breast cancer cells, established through continuous culture in the absence or presence of trastuzumab. The role of Cav3.2 in the acquisition of trastuzumab-resistance was assessed through pharmacological inhibition and induced overexpression. Levels of Cav3.2 were assessed in a panel of non-malignant and malignant breast cell lines using RT-qPCR and in patient samples representing different molecular subtypes (PAM50 cohort). Patient survival was also assessed in samples stratified by Cav3.2 expression (METABRIC and KM-Plotter cohort). Results Increased mRNA of Cav3.2 was a feature of both acquired and intrinsic trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cells. However, pharmacological inhibition of Cav3.2 did not restore trastuzumab-sensitivity nor did Cav3.2 overexpression induce the expression of markers associated with resistance, suggesting that Cav3.2 is not a driver of trastuzumab-resistance. Cav3.2 levels were significantly higher in luminal A, luminal B and HER2-enriched subtypes compared to the basal subtype. High levels of Cav3.2 were associated with poor outcome in patients with oestrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancers, whereas Cav3.2 levels were correlated positively with patient survival after chemotherapy in patients with HER2-positive breast cancers. Conclusion Our study identified elevated levels of Cav3.2 in trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cell lines. Although not a regulator of trastuzumab-resistance in HER2-positive breast cancer cells, Cav3.2 may be a potential differential biomarker for survival and treatment response in specific breast cancer subtypes. These studies add to the complex and diverse role of Ca2+-signalling in breast cancer progression and treatment. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12935-016-0299-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Overcoming therapeutic resistance is a major challenge and an understanding of the underlying mechanism will inform the development of second generation treatments [8]. For example, resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors in lung cancer is attributed to the acquisition of an EGFR T790M mutation, and evidence suggests that a combination of irreversible tyrosine kinase inhibitors and an anti-EGFR antibody is effective in overcoming this particular resistance mechanism [9].
Different mechanisms may be responsible for acquired and intrinsic trastuzumab-resistance. These mechanisms include, but are not limited to, mutations in ERBB2 resulting in the expression of a modified HER2 receptor altering trastuzumab binding [10,11] and upregulation of proteins that sterically hinder trastuzumab binding [12,13]. Increased signalling through HER1, HER2, HER3 (receptors of the EGFR-family) and IGF-1R [14][15][16][17] as well as downstream signalling such as activation of the PTEN/PI3K/Akt pathway also represent potential pathways for trastuzumab-resistance [7,[18][19][20]. Many of the aforementioned studies have been evaluated in breast cancer cell lines established from HER2-positive breast cancer cells cultured in the presence of trastuzumab, including the HER2-positive SKBR3 cell line [15,16,21].
A remodelling of Ca 2+ -signalling occurs in some breast cancers and is thought to be an important contributor or biomarker of breast tumourigenesis [22]. For example, enhanced expression of the Ca 2+ -channel TRPV6 is a feature of oestrogen receptor negative breast cancers [23] and alteration in the relative levels of the store operated Ca 2+ -influx pathway regulators STIM1 and STIM2 are a feature of the basal molecular breast cancer subtype and is associated with poor survival [24]. Ca 2+ is a critical regulator of many processes important in cancer [25], including proliferation and migration [26,27]. Indeed, inhibition of the Orai1 Ca 2+ -channel reduces the metastatic potential of breast cancer cells [28].
Ca 2+ -signalling is also implicated in some therapeutic resistance pathways in breast cancer. For example, the Ca 2+ -permeable ion channel TRPC5 plays a role in p-glycoprotein-mediated resistance to adriamycin in MCF-7 breast cancer cells [29]. However, the potential contribution of remodelling of Ca 2+ -signalling in trastuzumab-resistance has not yet been explored. Herein we sought to determine alterations of Ca 2+ -signalling proteins in the context of trastuzumab-resistance using HER2-positive SKBR3 breast cancer cell lines as models of intrinsic (no previous trastuzumab exposure) and acquired resistance. This work had the goal of identifying calcium channels and pumps that when inhibited could restore sensitivity to therapy and/or serve as biomarkers for prognosis or response to therapy.

Cell culture and development of resistant cell lines
Human breast cell lines were purchased from ATCC, provided by UQCCR or were a gift from the late Professor Rob Sutherland (Garvan Institute, Sydney, Australia). SKBR3 cells were subcultured in McCoy's 5A media (Invitrogen) supplemented with 10 % foetal bovine serum and 1 % penicillin/streptomycin mixture (100 U/ mL/100 µg/mL, Invitrogen) at 37 °C and 5 % CO 2 . Cells were routinely tested for mycoplasma infection and the SKBR3 parental cell line was STR profiled as previously described [30]. Trastuzumab-resistant cell lines were developed as follows, adapted from [31]. Briefly, cells were cultured in the presence of trastuzumab (10 µg/mL, Herceptin ® , Roche Products, Dee Why, Australia) over a 7 month period. Trastuzumab treatment was initiated 24 h after seeding. Age-matched controls (no trastuzumab) were produced over a similar time period. Media (±trastuzumab) was replaced every 3 days.

Cell viability, MTS assay
Cell viability was assessed using the CellTiter 96 ® aqueous non-radioactive cell proliferation assay (Promega) using the manufacturer's instructions. Cell lines were treated with trastuzumab or control media without antibiotics.

Real time RT-qPCR (RT-qPCR)
Real time RT-qPCR (RT-qPCR) was used to assess mRNA levels of target genes as previously described [32]. Briefly, total RNA (Qiagen RNeasy ™ Plus Mini Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) was reverse transcribed (Ominiscript RT Kit Qiagen) and amplified using TaqMan Universal or TaqMan Fast Universal PCR master mix (Life technologies, Australia), with TaqMan Gene expression Assays (Additional file 1: Data S1). Experiments were performed using a StepOnePlus Real Time RT-qPCR instrument (Applied Biosystems, Carlsbad, USA) with universal cycling conditions. Results are expressed normalised to 18S rRNA and analysed using the comparative C T method. A C T value of 35 was assigned to samples where amplification did not occur within 40 cycles for characterisation of trastuzumab-resistant and aged-matched control SKBR3 cell lines and assessment of Ca v 3.2 levels in breast cancer cell lines (Taqman Universal PCR master mix). A C T of 40 was assigned to samples where amplification did not occur within 40 cycles for studies assessing potential mRNA changes induced by Ca v 3.2 overexpression (TaqMan Fast PCR master mix).

Pharmacological inhibition of Ca v 3.2
Cells were treated with mibefradil (0.01-1 µM; Sigma Aldrich) [33] or ML218 (0.1-10 µM; Sigma Aldrich) [34] either alone or in combination with trastuzumab (10 µg/ mL), 24 h after seeding (2000 cells/well in a 96 well plate). All treatments and media changes were repeated every 2 days in antibiotic-free media. Sensitivity to trastuzumab was assessed using a MTS assay 192 h after treatment start.

Relative CACNA1H (Ca v 3.2) expression levels in breast cancer subtypes
The relative expression levels of CACNA1H were analysed in the cancer genome atlas network (TCGA) [35] breast cancer data set. Expression levels were defined as log2 transformed mean-centred transcript quantification produced by the TCGA consortium through RSEM (RNA-seq by expectation-maximization) [36]. TCGA tumours were divided into quartiles of CACNA1H expression. ERBB2, ESR1 and PGR levels were compared in each quartile to the quartile with the lowest level of CACNA1H expression.

Assessment of patient survival and response to chemotherapy (CT) in oestrogen receptor positive (ER+), HER2-positive (HER+) and triple negative (TNBC) tumours based on CACNA1H expression
Receiver operator curve (ROC) analysis was performed in each clinical subgroup and within the METABRIC [37] cohort that received chemotherapy (CT). The variable for ROC analysis was CACNA1H expression while the classification variable was patient survival (1 = death from breast cancer, 0 = non-event). The optimal criterion, as determined by MedCalc (https://www.medcalc.org/) factoring in disease prevalence as death caused by breast cancer, was used to stratify tumours into high and low expressing groups. Groups were used for stratifying patients by overall survival using Kaplan-Meier curves. The online tool KM-Plotter [38] was used to generate a validation set of Kaplan-Meier curves based on CACNA1H expression. Survival of patients was stratified using the "Auto select best cutoff" feature, which determines the optimal patient stratification based on median, tertile and quartile groupings. Logrank P values and hazard ratios were determined using MedCalc. Hazard ratios with corresponding 95 % confidence interval and P values are as indicated.

Development and characterisation of trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cell lines
Trastuzumab-resistant cell lines and sensitive agematched control cell lines were established from trastuzumab-sensitive parental SKBR3 cells by continuous culture in trastuzumab (10 µg/mL) for 7 months. Cell lines were assigned as "T" for continuous culture in trastuzumab or "V" for vehicle, "S" for sensitive and "R" for resistant. Cell line status after the 7 months of culture was analysed in the presence of trastuzumab (10 µg/mL) over 192 h (Fig. 1a). Most cell lines (6 of 8) cultured in the absence of trastuzumab retained sensitivity e.g. [SV 1 , SV 2 , Fig. 1a (i)]. Two cell lines cultured in the presence of trastuzumab were selected for further study based on the acquisition of trastuzumab-resistance. In these two cell lines the relative cell viability was not decreased by trastuzumab treatment compared to vehicle controls [RT 1 , RT 2 , Fig. 1a (ii)]. Two of eight age-matched control cell lines cultured continuously for 7 months in the absence of trastuzumab spontaneously developed resistance to trastuzumab and were defined as exhibiting intrinsic resistance to trastuzumab [RV 1 , RV 2 , Fig. 1a (iii)]. Trastuzumab-sensitive cell lines (SV 1 and SV 2 ) showed a significant decrease in cell viability after trastuzumab treatment, while acquired (RT 1 and RT 2 ) and intrinsic (RV 1 and RV 2 ) resistant cells showed no significant difference compared to vehicle controls (**p ≤ 0.1) (Fig. 1b).

Assessment of HER2 and EGFR expression in trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cell lines
To confirm that trastuzumab-resistance amongst the model cell lines was not due to loss of HER2 expression, or alterations in EGFR expression, mRNA and protein levels of HER2 and EGFR were quantified in all cell lines (Fig. 2). Resistant cell lines showed similar levels of HER2 and EGFR mRNA compared to trastuzumab-sensitive cell lines (p > 0.5) (Fig. 2a, b). HER2 protein (185 kDa) was seen in all samples, with no truncated receptor detected. HER2 protein levels were similar in all SKBR3-derived cell lines compared to parental SKBR3 cells and no differences in protein levels were observed between resistant and sensitive cell lines (p > 0.5) (Fig. 2c). EGFR protein levels were also similar in sensitive and resistant cell lines (Fig. 2d). Collectively these data suggested that the mechanism of resistance in this model was not related solely to changes in the expression of HER2 or EGFR.

Assessment of mRNA levels of calcium channels, pumps and regulating proteins identifies elevated Ca v 3.2 in trastuzumab-resistant cell lines
Assessment of over 40 targets including purinergic receptors (P2RX2/4/5, P2RY2/6), calcium pumps (PMCAs, SPCAs, SERCAs) and calcium permeable ion channels (Orai, TRPs, IP3Rs) demonstrated similar mRNA levels of most targets between trastuzumab-sensitive and resistant cell lines, except for the voltage gated calcium channel Ca v 3.2 (Fig. 3a). Further analysis confirmed the elevation of Ca v 3.2 mRNA in the RV 1 , RV 2 and RT 1 resistant cell lines in comparison to both sensitive cell lines SV 1 and SV 2 (Fig. 3b).

Pharmacological inhibition of Ca v 3.2 does not restore trastuzumab-sensitivity in trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cells
Ca v 3.2 inhibition was assessed in the trastuzumabresistant cell line (RV 1 ), which had the most pronounced upregulation of Ca v 3.2 relative to trastuzumab-sensitive SKBR3 cell lines. Cells were treated with mibefradil, a calcium channel blocker, which inhibits both T-type and L-type voltage-gated calcium channels, but with greater effectiveness for T-type calcium channel inhibition [33]. Treatment with mibefradil (0.01-1 µM) did not enhance the trastuzumab (10 µg/mL) response in the RV 1 resistant cell line (Fig. 4a). Treatment with ML218, a pharmacological inhibitor of Ca v 3.1, Ca v 3.2 and Ca v 3.3 channels with higher selectivity for Ca v 3.2 [34] at 0.1-10 µM also did not enhance the trastuzumab (10 µg/mL) response in the RV 1 cell line (Fig. 4b). Thus pharmacological inhibition of the Ca v 3.2 calcium channel with the inhibitors used in this study did not restore sensitivity to trastuzumab.

Assessment of ATP-mediated alterations in [Ca 2+ ] CYT in trastuzumab-sensitive and resistant SKBR3 derived cell lines
To assess if Ca 2+ -signalling alterations were associated with trastuzumab-resistance, [Ca 2+ ] CYT in response to purinergic receptor activation with ATP (1 mM) was measured. Some resistant cell lines appeared to have a delayed recovery in [Ca 2+ ] CYT after ATP stimulation (Fig. 5a). ATP concentration-response curves (1 nM to 1 mM) were used to characterise changes in intracellular Ca 2+ -signalling. The relative [Ca 2+ ] CYT at 800 s, a measure of recovery after ATP stimulation, was higher in acquired trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cell lines (RT 1 and RT 2 ) compared to trastuzumabsensitive age-matched controls (Fig. 5b).

Overexpression of Ca v 3.2 in parental SKBR3 cells does not increase expression of selected mRNA markers associated with drug-resistance
Since Ca v 3.2 is upregulated in trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cells and given the role of Ca 2+ -signalling in the activation of transcription factors [39] we hypothesised that Ca v 3.2 may induce the expression of genes related to therapeutic resistance and/or with cellular phenotypes associated with therapeutic resistance [40][41][42][43][44]. SKBR3 Sensitive and resistant SKBR3-derived cell lines retained their HER2 and EGFR expression levels. Assessment of mRNA levels in SKBR3-derived cell lines showed no differences in the mRNA levels of HER2 (a) and EGFR (b) in trastuzumab-resistant cell lines (RT 1 , RT 2 , RV 1 , RV 2 ) compared to sensitive age-matched control cell lines (SV 1 , SV 2 ). All mRNA levels were normalised to 18S rRNA and values expressed as −ΔC T (n = 3 ± SD). The protein level of HER2 (c) and EGFR (d) were analysed in all SKBR3-derived cell lines and representative immunoblots are shown in (ci) and di). All protein levels were normalised to β-actin protein expression, parental SKBR3 cells were used to assess changes in protein levels through continuous culture, MDA-MB-231 cells were used as a HER2-negative control (c) and MDA-MB-468 as an EGFR positive control (d). HER2 (cii) and EGFR (dii) protein expression was normalised to the SKBR3 parental cell line in biological replicates (n = 3 ± SD). Sensitive and resistant SKBR3-derived cell lines showed similar levels of EGFR and HER2 protein expression. Statistical analyses were performed using one-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-tests (p > 0.05) parental cells were either co-transfected with pEGFP-N1 + α1Ha (EGFP Ca v 3.2) or with pEGFP-N1 + the empty plasmid backbone (EGFP MOCK) as a control (Fig. 6). Overexpression of Ca v 3.2 did not produce any pronounced increase of the mRNA levels of vimentin, snail, KRT5, KRT6A, CXCR4, FOXM1 or HSP90AA1 (Fig. 6).

Assessment of Ca v 3.2 expression levels in cell lines and clinical breast cancer molecular subtypes
Levels of Ca v 3.2 mRNA were then assessed in a panel of non-malignant breast and breast cancer cell lines representing different molecular subtypes (Fig. 7). Ca v 3.2 mRNA levels in three of the trastuzumab-resistant cell lines (RT 1 , RV 1 and RV 2 ) were similar to the basallike HER2 overexpressing trastuzumab-resistant cell line HCC1569 [45]. Basal-like breast cancer cell lines (MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468) had undetectable levels of Ca v 3.2 mRNA, except for HCC1569 cells. In non-malignant breast cell lines (184A1, 184B5, MCF10A, Bret-80-Tert) Ca v 3.2 mRNA was not detected. Highest levels of Ca v 3.2 were seen in the luminal-like breast cancer lines MCF-7 and T47D. However, Ca v 3.2 mRNA levels were dramatically different between luminal-like breast cancer cell lines, with very low levels in ZR-75-1 and parental SKBR3 cell lines and very high levels in MCF-7 and T47D (Fig. 7).
Ca v 3.2 expression was also assessed in clinical breast cancer samples stratified into the intrinsic molecular subtypes using the cancer genome atlas expression data (TCGA) [35] (Fig. 8a). The luminal A and B subtypes showed the highest expression level of CACNA1H (Ca v 3.2), with the basal subtype expressing significantly lower levels of Ca v 3.2 compared to the luminal A, B and HER2 subtypes. Consistent with the cell line data, luminal breast cancers were associated with a wide range of Ca v 3.2 levels.

High levels of Ca v 3.2 are associated with increased levels of ESR1 and PGR receptor but Ca v 3.2 itself does not induce hormone receptor expression or expression of luminal markers in SKBR3 cells
Given the strong association between Ca v 3.2 and the luminal A and B molecular subtypes (Fig. 8a), we also assessed hormone receptor levels in different CAC-NA1H (Ca v 3.2) expression quartiles using the TCGA database, to address the hypothesis that this may reflect a direct regulatory effect. Breast cancers with high levels of CACNA1H (Ca v 3.2) (2nd, 3rd, 4th quartile) showed a significant elevation in levels of ESR1 and PGR compared to breast cancers with significantly low levels of Ca v 3.2 (1st quartile) (Fig. 8b). A significant correlation between ERBB2 was also observed, however, only minor compared to ESR1 and PGR (Fig. 8b). To define a potential role for Ca v 3.2 in the expression of ESR1 and PGR, we analysed the expression levels of ESR1, FOXA1, PGR and TFF1 in SKBR3 cells with induced overexpression of Ca v 3.2 (EGFP Ca v 3.2 SKBR3 cells). These results indicated that Ca v 3.2 is not a regulator of the expression of ESR1 and PGR or the luminal markers FOXA1 and TFF1 (Fig. 8c).

High CACNA1H (Ca v 3.2) expression levels in ER-positive (ER+) breast cancer are associated with poor prognosis, whereas in HER2-positive (HER2+) breast cancer patients it is associated with better responses to chemotherapy (CT)
Given the association between Ca v 3.2 and trastuzumabresistance in HER2-positive breast cancer cell lines in vitro and increased expression within the luminal subtype, we a b Fig. 4 The effect of pharmacological inhibition of Ca v 3.2 on trastuzumab-resistance. a Cells were treated with mibefradil (0.01-1 µM) alone or with trastuzumab (10 µg/mL) 24 h after seeding for 192 h (n = 3 ± SD). Mibefradil did not promote the response to trastuzumab (p > 0.05). b Cells were treated with ML218 (0.1-10 µM) alone or with trastuzumab (10 µg/mL) 24 h after seeding for 192 h (n = 3 ± SD). ML218 did not promote the response to trastuzumab (p > 0.05). Statistical analyses were performed using two-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-tests a b explored the potential of Ca v 3.2 as a biomarker in predicting patient survival and/or outcomes with chemotherapy. The overall survival of patients from both METABRIC [37] and KM-Plotter [38] cohorts were analysed based on their expression level of CACNA1H (Ca v 3.2) (high/low) in each subtype and within each group for patients receiving chemotherapy (CT) (Fig. 9a). Our analysis identified that high levels of Ca v 3.2 are associated with poor survival in ER + tumours in METABRIC and KM-Plotter cohorts [ Fig. 9a, b (i, ii)]. Note that beyond 20 years, survival of ER+ patients appear to be better for those with high expression, however, due to a small sample size remaining in the study at this time (9 patients) we were unable to explore this further. In all other subtypes, expression levels of Ca v 3.2 were not consistently stratified with overall survival in both cohorts (Fig. 9a). We then analysed the treatment response from the METABRIC and KM-Plotter cohorts towards chemotherapy in each subgroup. Interestingly, this analysis identified that HER2-positive patients receiving chemotherapy with tumours expressing high levels of CACNA1H demonstrated a better overall survival after chemotherapy, compared to patients with low levels of CACNA1H in both, METABRIC and KM-Plotter cohorts [ Fig. 9a, b (iii, iv)]. In all other subtypes, Ca v 3.2 did not significantly affect survival with therapy in both cohorts (Fig. 9a).

Discussion
Our work explores alterations in the expression of calcium channels in the context of trastuzumab-resistance and therapeutic response. The work presented here demonstrated that levels of Ca v 3.2, a voltage gated T-type calcium channel, are elevated in acquired and intrinsic SKBR3 breast cancer cell line models of trastuzumab-resistance. Whilst we found no evidence for a direct role of Ca v 3.2 in driving or reversing trastuzumab-resistance, our data suggest that Ca v 3.2 may be an informative prognosis marker in ER+ breast cancer patients for overall survival and in HER2-positive breast cancer patients with chemotherapy. In vitro models for trastuzumab-resistance include cell lines representing intrinsic resistance such as those established from the breast cancers of patients that do not a b c respond to trastuzumab therapy despite HER2 overexpression [46], and those that represent acquired resistance, established through continuous culture of HER2-positive breast cancer cell lines in the presence of trastuzumab [31,47]. Intrinsic resistance and acquired resistance may be mediated through different mechanisms [10]. In this study we developed a model system derived from the same cell line, suitable for assessing the mechanistic pathways that may be responsible for spontaneous (intrinsic) and acquired resistance derived from the same cell line. Intrinsic trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cell lines were established during the production of age-matched controls, which was not unexpected as continuous culturing can have a major impact on cellular phenotypes [48,49].
The dysregulation of calcium homeostasis and the expression levels of specific calcium channels and pumps can be a feature of tumour progression [26,50,51] and is associated with the acquisition of resistance to adriamycin, the IGF-1 receptor inhibitor ganitumab and other agents [29,52]. Our assessment of a wide panel of calcium pumps, channels and channel modulators identified an upregulation of the voltage gated Ca 2+ channel Ca v 3.2 in three of four trastuzumab-resistant SKBR3 cell lines. Consistent with the variety of pathways associated with trastuzumab resistance [10,16,18], Ca v 3.2 was not elevated in all of the resistant cell lines, with elevated Ca v 3.2 absent from RT 2 cells. Ca v 3.2 is a T-type voltage-gated calcium channel [53] generally expressed in cells of the heart, brain and liver and some tumours [53,54]. High expression levels of T-type channels are associated with increased proliferation in breast cancer cells [55] and tumour progression in prostate cancer cells [56]. Ca v 3.2 is also proposed as an oncogene candidate in T cell leukaemia [57]. A higher level of Ca v 3.2 was also identified in the basal-like, HER2-positive, intrinsically trastuzumab-resistant cell line HCC1569. Intrinsic resistance to trastuzumab is associated with expression of basal markers [58]. Thus Ca v 3.2 expression might be a feature of breast cancers that are trastuzumabresistant and also express basal markers. Our studies also demonstrated that although Ca v 3.2 may be a marker for activation of some trastuzumab-resistance pathways, inhibition of Ca v 3.2 is unable to restore trastuzumab-sensitivity in SKBR3 cell lines with acquired or intrinsic trastuzumabresistance. Ca v 3.2 inhibitors therefore do not appear to represent an effective way to overcome trastuzumab-resistance in HER2-positive breast tumours. Although induced overexpression did not promote expression of resistance markers, future studies using T-type Ca 2+ channel activators when available should assess the effect of these agents on the expression of resistance markers and trastuzumab resistance, analogous to studies which have evaluated the effects of pharmacological activation of L-type Ca 2+ channels with (S)-(-)-Bay K 8644 [59,60]. Only the acquired trastuzumab-resistant cell lines RT 1 and RT 2 showed a different calcium response after ATP stimulation compared to trastuzumab-sensitive controls, resulting in a delayed recovery. Although the response to ATP showed only minor alterations between sensitive and resistant cell lines and was not observed in all resistant cell lines, Ca v 3.2 might be involved in activation of transcription factors as previously shown for other voltage gated calcium channels [39]. However, our studies identified that Ca v 3.2 is not a driver of basal, epithelial to mesenchymal (EMT) transition or markers associated with resistance in SKBR3 cells. Ca v 3.2 mRNA was highly expressed in some luminal-like breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7 and T47D) compared to basal breast cancer cell lines that lack HER2 amplification, and was undetectable in cell lines derived from non-malignant breast tissue. The relationship between Ca v 3.2 and the luminal subtype was also observed in clinical breast cancer samples, with significantly higher Ca v 3.2 levels in luminal A and B subtypes compared to basal breast cancers. Although not a driver for ESR1 and PGR levels in SKBR3 cells, there was a strong correlation between Ca v 3.2 and levels of these hormone receptors in breast cancers. Analyses of clinical data showed that high levels of Ca v 3.2 were associated with poor prognosis in ER+ breast cancer patients. Surprisingly, our studies identified that high levels of Ca v 3.2 (See figure on previous page.) Fig. 8 a Analysis of CACNA1H (Ca v 3.2) expression across the intrinsic molecular subtypes of breast cancer in clinical patient samples. The relative CACNA1H expression level (log2 normalised) was produced by the TCGA consortium through RSEM [36]. The TCGA tumour cohort consists of 845 tumours with 140 basal-like (Basal), 67 HER2-enriched (HER2), 420 luminal A (LumA), 194 luminal B (LumB) and 24 normal-like (N-Like) as determined by RNA-Seq based PAM50 allocations by the TCGA consortium. The PAM50 intrinsic molecular subtypes are based on the classifications of gene expression patterns previously described [66,67]. This classification was performed by the TCGA consortium [35]. Horizontal lines represent data means with standard deviation and data points in grey. Statistical analysis was performed on expression levels of CACNA1H in basal-like compared to HER2-enriched and luminal subtypes using a one-way ANOVA with Sidak corrected multiple comparisons,(****p ≤ 0.0001). b Relative gene expression for breast cancer receptors ERBB2 (HER2), ESR1 (oestrogen receptor) and PGR (progesterone receptor) within each quartile of CACNA1H expression. Statistical analysis was performed using a one-way ANOVA with Sidak corrected multiple comparisons, comparing expression levels between the highest and the lowest quartile for each gene (*p ≤ 0.05, ****p ≤ 0.0001). c Ca v 3.2 overexpression in SKBR cells (SKBR3 EGFP) did not increase expression of hormone receptors or proteins involved in oestrogen-receptor mediated signalling TFF1, FOXA1, quantified using RT-qPCR. Results are expressed as fold change normalised to EGFP MOCK (n = 3 ±SD) was associated with a better response to chemotherapy in patients with HER2-positive breast cancers.
The apparent contradiction of Ca v 3.2 mRNA levels being negatively associated with survival in ER+ cancers and positively associated with survival with chemotherapy in HER-positive breast cancers, may be reflective not only of potential differential contribution of calcium signalling in different breast cancer subtypes but also a b Fig. 9 Ca v 3.2 expression stratifies the survival of breast cancer patients. The survival of patients from both the METABRIC and Kaplan-Meier Plotter cohorts were stratified based on the expression of Ca v 3.2 for each of the clinical subgroups and within those groups, in patients treated with chemotherapy (CT). METABRIC patients were stratified on overall survival (OS) and the KM-Plotter cohort on relapse free survival (RFS). Log-rank hazard ratios (HR) and corresponding P values are shown (a). Kaplan-Meier curves from data shown in panel A for ER+ patients (b i, ii) and those with HER2-positive tumours (HER+) treated with CT (b iii, iv). Tumours were stratified on the basis of their CACNA1H expression into low and high expressing groups, numbers indicated in brackets in the diversity of the Ca 2+ -signal. Some aspects of calcium signalling could be quite different between HER2+ and ER+ breast cancers and this could contribute to differences in the association between Ca v 3.2 levels and survival, for example Orai3-mediated Ca 2+ -influx is Ca 2+ -store dependent in ER positive but not ER negative breast cancer cells lines [61]. Ca 2+ -influx can promote cellular proliferation or be an inducer of cell death [50]. In the context of the association between high Ca v 3.2 levels and poor prognosis in ER+ breast cancers, Ca v 3.2-mediated constitutive Ca 2+ -influx contributes to enhanced proliferation in the LNCaP prostate cancer cell line [62]. Whereas the association between high levels of Ca v 3.2 and better outcomes with chemotherapy in HER2-positive breast cancer may be related to important role of Ca 2+ -increases during cell death [63].
Although not yet studied in HER2-positive breast cancer cell lines, the T-type Ca 2+ -channel Ca v 3.1 is a key mechanism by which cyclophosphamide induces apoptosis in luminal MCF-7 breast cancer cells [64] and Ca v 3.2 is essential in the inhibitory effects of epigallocatechin-3-gallate on the viability of MCF-7 breast cancer cells [65].

Conclusion
Our data suggest that at the clinical level, Ca v 3.2 may be similarly important in the responses to chemotherapy in HER2-positive breast cancers, however, further studies are required. In summary, these studies have identified enhanced expression of Ca v 3.2 as a feature of trastuzumab-resistant breast cancer cells, however, Ca v 3.2 does not seem to be a driver of trastuzumab-resistance. Further studies are now required to elucidate the potential differential roles of Ca v 3.2 in different breast cancer subtypes and its utility as a potential biomarker of prognosis and therapeutic responsiveness in patients with ER + and HER2-positive breast cancers respectively.