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Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer

In colorectal cancer (CoCa) EpCAM is frequently associated with claudin-7. There is evidence that tumor-promoting EpCAM activities are modulated by the association with claudin-7. To support this hypothesis, claudin-7 was knocked-down (kd) in HT29 and SW948 cells. HT29-cld7(kd) and SW948-cld7(kd) ce...

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Autores principales: Philip, Rahel, Heiler, Sarah, Mu, Wei, Büchler, Markus W., Zöller, Margot, Thuma, Florian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4385835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25514462
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author Philip, Rahel
Heiler, Sarah
Mu, Wei
Büchler, Markus W.
Zöller, Margot
Thuma, Florian
author_facet Philip, Rahel
Heiler, Sarah
Mu, Wei
Büchler, Markus W.
Zöller, Margot
Thuma, Florian
author_sort Philip, Rahel
collection PubMed
description In colorectal cancer (CoCa) EpCAM is frequently associated with claudin-7. There is evidence that tumor-promoting EpCAM activities are modulated by the association with claudin-7. To support this hypothesis, claudin-7 was knocked-down (kd) in HT29 and SW948 cells. HT29-cld7(kd) and SW948-cld7(kd) cells display decreased anchorage-independent growth and the capacity for holoclone-, respectively, sphere-formation is reduced. Tumor growth is delayed and cld7(kd) cells poorly metastasize. In line with this, migratory and invasive potential of cld7(kd) clones is strongly impaired, migration being inhibited by anti-CD49c, but not anti-EpCAM, although motility is reduced in EpCAM siRNA-treated cells. This is due to claudin-7 recruiting EpCAM in glycolipid-enriched membrane fractions towards claudin-7-associated TACE and presenilin2, which cleave EpCAM. The cleaved intracellular domain, EpIC, promotes epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-associated transcription factor expression, which together with fibronectin and vimentin are reduced in claudin-7(kd) cells. But, uptake of HT29(wt) and SW948(wt) exosomes by the claudin-7(kd) lines sufficed for transcription factor upregulation and for restoring motility. Thus, claudin-7 contributes to motility and invasion and is required for recruiting EpCAM towards TACE/presenilin2. EpIC generation further supports motility by promoting a shift towards EMT. Notably, EMT features of cld7-competent metastatic CoCa cells can be transferred via exosomes to poorly metastatic cells.
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spelling pubmed-43858352015-04-14 Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer Philip, Rahel Heiler, Sarah Mu, Wei Büchler, Markus W. Zöller, Margot Thuma, Florian Oncotarget Research Paper In colorectal cancer (CoCa) EpCAM is frequently associated with claudin-7. There is evidence that tumor-promoting EpCAM activities are modulated by the association with claudin-7. To support this hypothesis, claudin-7 was knocked-down (kd) in HT29 and SW948 cells. HT29-cld7(kd) and SW948-cld7(kd) cells display decreased anchorage-independent growth and the capacity for holoclone-, respectively, sphere-formation is reduced. Tumor growth is delayed and cld7(kd) cells poorly metastasize. In line with this, migratory and invasive potential of cld7(kd) clones is strongly impaired, migration being inhibited by anti-CD49c, but not anti-EpCAM, although motility is reduced in EpCAM siRNA-treated cells. This is due to claudin-7 recruiting EpCAM in glycolipid-enriched membrane fractions towards claudin-7-associated TACE and presenilin2, which cleave EpCAM. The cleaved intracellular domain, EpIC, promotes epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-associated transcription factor expression, which together with fibronectin and vimentin are reduced in claudin-7(kd) cells. But, uptake of HT29(wt) and SW948(wt) exosomes by the claudin-7(kd) lines sufficed for transcription factor upregulation and for restoring motility. Thus, claudin-7 contributes to motility and invasion and is required for recruiting EpCAM towards TACE/presenilin2. EpIC generation further supports motility by promoting a shift towards EMT. Notably, EMT features of cld7-competent metastatic CoCa cells can be transferred via exosomes to poorly metastatic cells. Impact Journals LLC 2014-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4385835/ /pubmed/25514462 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Philip et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Philip, Rahel
Heiler, Sarah
Mu, Wei
Büchler, Markus W.
Zöller, Margot
Thuma, Florian
Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer
title Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer
title_full Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer
title_fullStr Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer
title_full_unstemmed Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer
title_short Claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer
title_sort claudin-7 promotes the epithelial – mesenchymal transition in human colorectal cancer
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4385835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25514462
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