Research Papers:
VE-cadherin RGD motifs promote metastasis and constitute a potential therapeutic target in melanoma and breast cancers
PDF | HTML | Supplementary Files | How to cite
Metrics: PDF 2879 views | HTML 4085 views | ?
Abstract
Rubén A. Bartolomé1, Sofía Torres1, Soledad Isern de Val1, Beatriz Escudero-Paniagua1, Eva Calviño1, Joaquín Teixidó1 and J. Ignacio Casal1
1 Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas (CIB-CSIC), Ramiro de Maeztu, Madrid, Spain
Correspondence to:
J. Ignacio Casal, email:
Keywords: VE-cadherin, RGD motif, metastasis, melanoma, breast cancer
Received: November 08, 2016 Accepted: November 14, 2016 Published: December 09, 2016
Abstract
We have investigated the role of vascular-endothelial (VE)-cadherin in melanoma and breast cancer metastasis. We found that VE-cadherin is expressed in highly aggressive melanoma and breast cancer cell lines. Remarkably, inactivation of VE-cadherin triggered a significant loss of malignant traits (proliferation, adhesion, invasion and transendothelial migration) in melanoma and breast cancer cells. These effects, except transendothelial migration, were induced by the VE-cadherin RGD motifs. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated an interaction between VE-cadherin and α2β1 integrin, with the RGD motifs found to directly affect β1 integrin activation. VE-cadherin-mediated integrin signaling occurred through specific activation of SRC, ERK and JNK, including AKT in melanoma. Knocking down VE-cadherin suppressed lung colonization capacity of melanoma or breast cancer cells inoculated in mice, while pre-incubation with VE-cadherin RGD peptides promoted lung metastasis for both cancer types. Finally, an in silico study revealed the association of high VE-cadherin expression with poor survival in a subset of melanoma patients and breast cancer patients showing low CD34 expression. These findings support a general role for VE-cadherin and other RGD cadherins as critical regulators of lung and liver metastasis in multiple solid tumours. These results pave the way for cadherin-specific RGD targeted therapies to control disseminated metastasis in multiple cancers.
All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
PII: 13832