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miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases

BACKGROUND: The development of metastases involves the dissociation of cells from the primary tumor to penetrate the basement membrane, invade and then exit the vasculature to seed, and colonize distant tissues. The last step, establishment of macroscopic tumors at distant sites, is the least well u...

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Autores principales: Dykxhoorn, Derek M., Wu, Yichao, Xie, Huangming, Yu, Fengyan, Lal, Ashish, Petrocca, Fabio, Martinvalet, Denis, Song, Erwei, Lim, Bing, Lieberman, Judy
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2749331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19787069
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007181
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author Dykxhoorn, Derek M.
Wu, Yichao
Xie, Huangming
Yu, Fengyan
Lal, Ashish
Petrocca, Fabio
Martinvalet, Denis
Song, Erwei
Lim, Bing
Lieberman, Judy
author_facet Dykxhoorn, Derek M.
Wu, Yichao
Xie, Huangming
Yu, Fengyan
Lal, Ashish
Petrocca, Fabio
Martinvalet, Denis
Song, Erwei
Lim, Bing
Lieberman, Judy
author_sort Dykxhoorn, Derek M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The development of metastases involves the dissociation of cells from the primary tumor to penetrate the basement membrane, invade and then exit the vasculature to seed, and colonize distant tissues. The last step, establishment of macroscopic tumors at distant sites, is the least well understood. Four isogenic mouse breast cancer cell lines (67NR, 168FARN, 4TO7, and 4T1) that differ in their ability to metastasize when implanted into the mammary fat pad are used to model the steps of metastasis. Only 4T1 forms macroscopic lung and liver metastases. Because some miRNAs are dysregulated in cancer and affect cellular transformation, tumor formation, and metastasis, we examined whether changes in miRNA expression might explain the differences in metastasis of these cells. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: miRNA expression was analyzed by miRNA microarray and quantitative RT–PCR in isogenic mouse breast cancer cells with distinct metastatic capabilities. 4T1 cells that form macroscopic metastases had elevated expression of miR-200 family miRNAs compared to related cells that invade distant tissues, but are unable to colonize. Moreover, over-expressing miR-200 in 4TO7 cells enabled them to metastasize to lung and liver. These findings are surprising since the miR-200 family was previously shown to promote epithelial characteristics by inhibiting the transcriptional repressor Zeb2 and thereby enhancing E-cadherin expression. We confirmed these findings in these cells. The most metastatic 4T1 cells acquired epithelial properties (high expression of E-cadherin and cytokeratin-18) compared to the less metastatic cells. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Expression of miR-200, which promotes a mesenchymal to epithelial cell transition (MET) by inhibiting Zeb2 expression, unexpectedly enhances macroscopic metastases in mouse breast cancer cell lines. These results suggest that for some tumors, tumor colonization at metastatic sites might be enhanced by MET. Therefore the epithelial nature of a tumor does not predict metastatic outcome.
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spelling pubmed-27493312009-09-29 miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases Dykxhoorn, Derek M. Wu, Yichao Xie, Huangming Yu, Fengyan Lal, Ashish Petrocca, Fabio Martinvalet, Denis Song, Erwei Lim, Bing Lieberman, Judy PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The development of metastases involves the dissociation of cells from the primary tumor to penetrate the basement membrane, invade and then exit the vasculature to seed, and colonize distant tissues. The last step, establishment of macroscopic tumors at distant sites, is the least well understood. Four isogenic mouse breast cancer cell lines (67NR, 168FARN, 4TO7, and 4T1) that differ in their ability to metastasize when implanted into the mammary fat pad are used to model the steps of metastasis. Only 4T1 forms macroscopic lung and liver metastases. Because some miRNAs are dysregulated in cancer and affect cellular transformation, tumor formation, and metastasis, we examined whether changes in miRNA expression might explain the differences in metastasis of these cells. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: miRNA expression was analyzed by miRNA microarray and quantitative RT–PCR in isogenic mouse breast cancer cells with distinct metastatic capabilities. 4T1 cells that form macroscopic metastases had elevated expression of miR-200 family miRNAs compared to related cells that invade distant tissues, but are unable to colonize. Moreover, over-expressing miR-200 in 4TO7 cells enabled them to metastasize to lung and liver. These findings are surprising since the miR-200 family was previously shown to promote epithelial characteristics by inhibiting the transcriptional repressor Zeb2 and thereby enhancing E-cadherin expression. We confirmed these findings in these cells. The most metastatic 4T1 cells acquired epithelial properties (high expression of E-cadherin and cytokeratin-18) compared to the less metastatic cells. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Expression of miR-200, which promotes a mesenchymal to epithelial cell transition (MET) by inhibiting Zeb2 expression, unexpectedly enhances macroscopic metastases in mouse breast cancer cell lines. These results suggest that for some tumors, tumor colonization at metastatic sites might be enhanced by MET. Therefore the epithelial nature of a tumor does not predict metastatic outcome. Public Library of Science 2009-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2749331/ /pubmed/19787069 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007181 Text en Dykxhoorn et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dykxhoorn, Derek M.
Wu, Yichao
Xie, Huangming
Yu, Fengyan
Lal, Ashish
Petrocca, Fabio
Martinvalet, Denis
Song, Erwei
Lim, Bing
Lieberman, Judy
miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases
title miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases
title_full miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases
title_fullStr miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases
title_full_unstemmed miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases
title_short miR-200 Enhances Mouse Breast Cancer Cell Colonization to Form Distant Metastases
title_sort mir-200 enhances mouse breast cancer cell colonization to form distant metastases
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2749331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19787069
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007181
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