TY - JOUR
T1 - Caveolin-1 (P132L), a common breast cancer mutation, confers mammary cell invasiveness and defines a novel stem cell/metastasis-associated gene signature
AU - Bonuccelli, Gloria
AU - Casimiro, Mathew C.
AU - Sotgia, Federica
AU - Wang, Chenguang
AU - Liu, Manran
AU - Katiyar, Sanjay
AU - Zhou, Jie
AU - Dew, Elliott
AU - Capozza, Franco
AU - Daumer, Kristin M.
AU - Minetti, Carlo
AU - Milliman, Janet N.
AU - Alpy, Fabien
AU - Rio, Marie Christine
AU - Tomasetto, Catherine
AU - Mercier, Isabelle
AU - Flomenberg, Neal
AU - Frank, Philippe G.
AU - Pestell, Richard G.
AU - Lisanti, Michael P.
N1 - P30-CA-56036, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01-CA-098779, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01-CA-107382, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01-CA-120876, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01-CA-70896, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01-CA-75503, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01-CA-80250, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01-CA-86072, NCI NIH HHS, United States
PY - 2009/5
Y1 - 2009/5
N2 - Here we used the Met-1 cell line in an orthotopic transplantation model in FVB/N mice to dissect the role of the Cav-1(P132L) mutation in human breast cancer. Identical experiments were performed in parallel with wild-type Cav-1. Cav-1(P132L) up-regulated the expression of estrogen receptor-α as predicted, because only estrogen receptor-α-positive patients have been shown to harbor Cav-1(P132L) mutations. In the context of primary tumor formation, Cav-1(P132L) behaved as a loss-of-function mutation, lacking any tumor suppressor activity. In contrast, Cav-1(P132L) caused significant increases in cell migration, invasion, and experimental metastasis, consistent with a gain-of-function mutation. To identify possible molecular mechanism(s) underlying this invasive gain-of-function activity, we performed unbiased gene expression profiling. From this analysis, we show that the Cav-1(P132L) expression signature contains numerous genes that have been previously associated with cell migration, invasion, and metastasis. These include i) secreted growth factors and extracellular matrix proteins (Cyr61, Plf, Pthlh, Serpinb5, Tnc, and Wnt10a), ii) proteases that generate EGF and HGF (Adamts1 and St14), and iii) tyrosine kinase substrates and integrin signaling/adapter proteins (Akap13, Cdcp1, Ddef1, Eps15, Foxf1a, Gab2, Hs2st1, and Itgb4). Several of the P132L-specific genes are also highly expressed in stem/progenitor cells or are associated with myoepithelial cells, suggestive of an epithelial-mesenchymal transition. These results directly support clinical data showing that patients harboring Cav-1 mutations are more likely to undergo recurrence and metastasis. Copyright © American Society for Investigative Pathology.
AB - Here we used the Met-1 cell line in an orthotopic transplantation model in FVB/N mice to dissect the role of the Cav-1(P132L) mutation in human breast cancer. Identical experiments were performed in parallel with wild-type Cav-1. Cav-1(P132L) up-regulated the expression of estrogen receptor-α as predicted, because only estrogen receptor-α-positive patients have been shown to harbor Cav-1(P132L) mutations. In the context of primary tumor formation, Cav-1(P132L) behaved as a loss-of-function mutation, lacking any tumor suppressor activity. In contrast, Cav-1(P132L) caused significant increases in cell migration, invasion, and experimental metastasis, consistent with a gain-of-function mutation. To identify possible molecular mechanism(s) underlying this invasive gain-of-function activity, we performed unbiased gene expression profiling. From this analysis, we show that the Cav-1(P132L) expression signature contains numerous genes that have been previously associated with cell migration, invasion, and metastasis. These include i) secreted growth factors and extracellular matrix proteins (Cyr61, Plf, Pthlh, Serpinb5, Tnc, and Wnt10a), ii) proteases that generate EGF and HGF (Adamts1 and St14), and iii) tyrosine kinase substrates and integrin signaling/adapter proteins (Akap13, Cdcp1, Ddef1, Eps15, Foxf1a, Gab2, Hs2st1, and Itgb4). Several of the P132L-specific genes are also highly expressed in stem/progenitor cells or are associated with myoepithelial cells, suggestive of an epithelial-mesenchymal transition. These results directly support clinical data showing that patients harboring Cav-1 mutations are more likely to undergo recurrence and metastasis. Copyright © American Society for Investigative Pathology.
U2 - 10.2353/ajpath.2009.080648
DO - 10.2353/ajpath.2009.080648
M3 - Article
C2 - 19395651
SN - 0002-9440
VL - 174
SP - 1650
EP - 1662
JO - American journal of pathology
JF - American journal of pathology
IS - 5
ER -