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Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal

The high mortality of melanoma is caused by rapid spread of cancer cells, which occurs unusually early in tumour evolution. Unlike most solid tumours, thickness rather than cytological markers or differentiation is the best guide to metastatic potential. Multiple stimuli that drive melanoma cell mig...

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Autores principales: Muinonen-Martin, Andrew J., Susanto, Olivia, Zhang, Qifeng, Smethurst, Elizabeth, Faller, William J., Veltman, Douwe M., Kalna, Gabriela, Lindsay, Colin, Bennett, Dorothy C., Sansom, Owen J., Herd, Robert, Jones, Robert, Machesky, Laura M., Wakelam, Michael J. O., Knecht, David A., Insall, Robert H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4196730/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25313567
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001966
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author Muinonen-Martin, Andrew J.
Susanto, Olivia
Zhang, Qifeng
Smethurst, Elizabeth
Faller, William J.
Veltman, Douwe M.
Kalna, Gabriela
Lindsay, Colin
Bennett, Dorothy C.
Sansom, Owen J.
Herd, Robert
Jones, Robert
Machesky, Laura M.
Wakelam, Michael J. O.
Knecht, David A.
Insall, Robert H.
author_facet Muinonen-Martin, Andrew J.
Susanto, Olivia
Zhang, Qifeng
Smethurst, Elizabeth
Faller, William J.
Veltman, Douwe M.
Kalna, Gabriela
Lindsay, Colin
Bennett, Dorothy C.
Sansom, Owen J.
Herd, Robert
Jones, Robert
Machesky, Laura M.
Wakelam, Michael J. O.
Knecht, David A.
Insall, Robert H.
author_sort Muinonen-Martin, Andrew J.
collection PubMed
description The high mortality of melanoma is caused by rapid spread of cancer cells, which occurs unusually early in tumour evolution. Unlike most solid tumours, thickness rather than cytological markers or differentiation is the best guide to metastatic potential. Multiple stimuli that drive melanoma cell migration have been described, but it is not clear which are responsible for invasion, nor if chemotactic gradients exist in real tumours. In a chamber-based assay for melanoma dispersal, we find that cells migrate efficiently away from one another, even in initially homogeneous medium. This dispersal is driven by positive chemotaxis rather than chemorepulsion or contact inhibition. The principal chemoattractant, unexpectedly active across all tumour stages, is the lipid agonist lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) acting through the LPA receptor LPAR1. LPA induces chemotaxis of remarkable accuracy, and is both necessary and sufficient for chemotaxis and invasion in 2-D and 3-D assays. Growth factors, often described as tumour attractants, cause negligible chemotaxis themselves, but potentiate chemotaxis to LPA. Cells rapidly break down LPA present at substantial levels in culture medium and normal skin to generate outward-facing gradients. We measure LPA gradients across the margins of melanomas in vivo, confirming the physiological importance of our results. We conclude that LPA chemotaxis provides a strong drive for melanoma cells to invade outwards. Cells create their own gradients by acting as a sink, breaking down locally present LPA, and thus forming a gradient that is low in the tumour and high in the surrounding areas. The key step is not acquisition of sensitivity to the chemoattractant, but rather the tumour growing to break down enough LPA to form a gradient. Thus the stimulus that drives cell dispersal is not the presence of LPA itself, but the self-generated, outward-directed gradient.
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spelling pubmed-41967302014-10-16 Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal Muinonen-Martin, Andrew J. Susanto, Olivia Zhang, Qifeng Smethurst, Elizabeth Faller, William J. Veltman, Douwe M. Kalna, Gabriela Lindsay, Colin Bennett, Dorothy C. Sansom, Owen J. Herd, Robert Jones, Robert Machesky, Laura M. Wakelam, Michael J. O. Knecht, David A. Insall, Robert H. PLoS Biol Research Article The high mortality of melanoma is caused by rapid spread of cancer cells, which occurs unusually early in tumour evolution. Unlike most solid tumours, thickness rather than cytological markers or differentiation is the best guide to metastatic potential. Multiple stimuli that drive melanoma cell migration have been described, but it is not clear which are responsible for invasion, nor if chemotactic gradients exist in real tumours. In a chamber-based assay for melanoma dispersal, we find that cells migrate efficiently away from one another, even in initially homogeneous medium. This dispersal is driven by positive chemotaxis rather than chemorepulsion or contact inhibition. The principal chemoattractant, unexpectedly active across all tumour stages, is the lipid agonist lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) acting through the LPA receptor LPAR1. LPA induces chemotaxis of remarkable accuracy, and is both necessary and sufficient for chemotaxis and invasion in 2-D and 3-D assays. Growth factors, often described as tumour attractants, cause negligible chemotaxis themselves, but potentiate chemotaxis to LPA. Cells rapidly break down LPA present at substantial levels in culture medium and normal skin to generate outward-facing gradients. We measure LPA gradients across the margins of melanomas in vivo, confirming the physiological importance of our results. We conclude that LPA chemotaxis provides a strong drive for melanoma cells to invade outwards. Cells create their own gradients by acting as a sink, breaking down locally present LPA, and thus forming a gradient that is low in the tumour and high in the surrounding areas. The key step is not acquisition of sensitivity to the chemoattractant, but rather the tumour growing to break down enough LPA to form a gradient. Thus the stimulus that drives cell dispersal is not the presence of LPA itself, but the self-generated, outward-directed gradient. Public Library of Science 2014-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4196730/ /pubmed/25313567 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001966 Text en © 2014 Muinonen-Martin 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
Muinonen-Martin, Andrew J.
Susanto, Olivia
Zhang, Qifeng
Smethurst, Elizabeth
Faller, William J.
Veltman, Douwe M.
Kalna, Gabriela
Lindsay, Colin
Bennett, Dorothy C.
Sansom, Owen J.
Herd, Robert
Jones, Robert
Machesky, Laura M.
Wakelam, Michael J. O.
Knecht, David A.
Insall, Robert H.
Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal
title Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal
title_full Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal
title_fullStr Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal
title_full_unstemmed Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal
title_short Melanoma Cells Break Down LPA to Establish Local Gradients That Drive Chemotactic Dispersal
title_sort melanoma cells break down lpa to establish local gradients that drive chemotactic dispersal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4196730/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25313567
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001966
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