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Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma

A dynamic phenotypic change contributes to the metastatic progression and drug resistance in malignant melanoma. Nevertheless, mechanisms for a phenotypic change have remained to be addressed. Here, we show that Met receptor expression changes in a cell-autonomous manner and can distinguish phenotyp...

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Autores principales: Adachi, Eri, Sakai, Katsuya, Nishiuchi, Takumi, Imamura, Ryu, Sato, Hiroki, Matsumoto, Kunio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5342589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27683122
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12221
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author Adachi, Eri
Sakai, Katsuya
Nishiuchi, Takumi
Imamura, Ryu
Sato, Hiroki
Matsumoto, Kunio
author_facet Adachi, Eri
Sakai, Katsuya
Nishiuchi, Takumi
Imamura, Ryu
Sato, Hiroki
Matsumoto, Kunio
author_sort Adachi, Eri
collection PubMed
description A dynamic phenotypic change contributes to the metastatic progression and drug resistance in malignant melanoma. Nevertheless, mechanisms for a phenotypic change have remained to be addressed. Here, we show that Met receptor expression changes in a cell-autonomous manner and can distinguish phenotypical differences in growth, as well as in metastatic and drug-resistant characteristics. In metastatic melanoma, the cells are composed of Met-low and Met-high populations. Met-low populations have stem-like gene expression profiles, are resistant to chemotherapeutic agents, and have shown abundant angiogenesis and rapid tumor growth in subcutaneous inoculation. Met-high populations have a differentiated phenotype, are relatively resistant to B-RAF inhibitor, and are highly metastatic to the lungs. Met plays a definitive role in lung metastasis because the lung metastasis of Met-high cells requires Met, and treatment of mice with the Met-containing exosomes from Met-high cells facilitates lung metastasis by Met-low cells. Clonal cell fate analysis showed the hierarchical phenotypical changes from Met-low to Met-high populations. Met-low cells either showed self-renewal or changed into Met-high cells, whereas Met-high cells remained Met-high. Clonal transition from Met-low to Met-high cells accompanied changes in the gene expression profile, in tumor growth, and in metastasis that were similar to those in Met-high cells. These findings indicate that malignant melanoma has the ability to undergo phenotypic change by a cell-intrinsic/autonomous mechanism that can be characterized by Met expression.
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spelling pubmed-53425892017-03-24 Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma Adachi, Eri Sakai, Katsuya Nishiuchi, Takumi Imamura, Ryu Sato, Hiroki Matsumoto, Kunio Oncotarget Research Paper A dynamic phenotypic change contributes to the metastatic progression and drug resistance in malignant melanoma. Nevertheless, mechanisms for a phenotypic change have remained to be addressed. Here, we show that Met receptor expression changes in a cell-autonomous manner and can distinguish phenotypical differences in growth, as well as in metastatic and drug-resistant characteristics. In metastatic melanoma, the cells are composed of Met-low and Met-high populations. Met-low populations have stem-like gene expression profiles, are resistant to chemotherapeutic agents, and have shown abundant angiogenesis and rapid tumor growth in subcutaneous inoculation. Met-high populations have a differentiated phenotype, are relatively resistant to B-RAF inhibitor, and are highly metastatic to the lungs. Met plays a definitive role in lung metastasis because the lung metastasis of Met-high cells requires Met, and treatment of mice with the Met-containing exosomes from Met-high cells facilitates lung metastasis by Met-low cells. Clonal cell fate analysis showed the hierarchical phenotypical changes from Met-low to Met-high populations. Met-low cells either showed self-renewal or changed into Met-high cells, whereas Met-high cells remained Met-high. Clonal transition from Met-low to Met-high cells accompanied changes in the gene expression profile, in tumor growth, and in metastasis that were similar to those in Met-high cells. These findings indicate that malignant melanoma has the ability to undergo phenotypic change by a cell-intrinsic/autonomous mechanism that can be characterized by Met expression. Impact Journals LLC 2016-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5342589/ /pubmed/27683122 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12221 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Adachi et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Adachi, Eri
Sakai, Katsuya
Nishiuchi, Takumi
Imamura, Ryu
Sato, Hiroki
Matsumoto, Kunio
Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma
title Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma
title_full Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma
title_fullStr Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma
title_full_unstemmed Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma
title_short Different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of Met in metastatic melanoma
title_sort different growth and metastatic phenotypes associated with a cell-intrinsic change of met in metastatic melanoma
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5342589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27683122
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12221
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