Abstract
Estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancer (BC) represents a significant proportion of BC brain metastasis (BCBM) but remains understudied. Here, we report that FGFR1-amplification, a well-established driver of ER+ BC endocrine resistance, promotes ER+ BCBM colonization in young and aged mice, through brain-dependent mechanisms. FGFR1-dependent brain colonization in young and aged mice occurs via canonical FGF2/FGFR1 signaling and non-canonical NCAM1/FGFR1 interactions. Astrocytic FGF2-mediated paracrine activation of FGFR1 promoted BCBMs in estrogen-treated young mice, but FGF2 signaling decreased in the brain with aging and estrogen-depletion. Neuronal and glial NCAM1, which remain unchanged in young and aged brains, promoted adhesion to neurons and migration of ER+ BC cells, suggesting that interactions with astrocytes and neurons facilitate early ER+ BCBM colonization through FGFR1. Importantly, FDA-approved FGFR inhibitors effectively blocked early but not late metastatic progression only in young mice, suggesting limited efficacy of FGFR inhibitors to block non-kinase-dependent FGFR1 functions in vivo .