Literature DB >> 11950593

Motility is rate-limiting for invasion of bladder carcinoma cell lines.

Jareer Kassis1, Robert Radinsky, Alan Wells.   

Abstract

Induced migration of tumor cells is generally considered to be one critical step in cancer progression to the invasive and metastatic stage. The implicit caveat of studies that show this is that other, unknown, signaling pathways and biophysical events are actually the operative rate-limiting steps, and not motility per se. Thus, to examine the hypothesis that motility is a single, but overall rate-limiting function required for invasion, disparate motility processes need be blocked with concordant effects on tumor invasion. Recently, we and others have described two signaling pathways that are critical to growth factor-induced motility but not mitogenesis. The key molecular switches are phospholipase C-gamma (PLCgamma) and calpain for cytoskeletal reorganization and rear detachment, respectively. We examined this hypothesis in a highly invasive tumor, bladder carcinoma. Three different human tumor cell lines, 253J-B-V, UMUC and T-24, were tested for invasiveness in vitro by transmigration of a Matrigel barrier. Inhibiting PLCgamma with the pharmacologic agent U73122 or the molecular dominant-negative PLCz construct reduced both invasiveness and motility. The same was noted when calpain was blocked using calpain inhibitor I (ALLN). These results demonstrate that one interventional target for limiting invasion is not necessarily an individual motility pathway but rather cell migration per se.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11950593     DOI: 10.1016/s1357-2725(01)00173-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Biochem Cell Biol        ISSN: 1357-2725            Impact factor:   5.085


  6 in total

1.  Combined inhibition of PLC{gamma}-1 and c-Src abrogates epidermal growth factor receptor-mediated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma invasion.

Authors:  Hiroshi Nozawa; Gina Howell; Shinsuke Suzuki; Qing Zhang; Yanjun Qi; Judith Klein-Seetharaman; Alan Wells; Jennifer R Grandis; Sufi M Thomas
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2008-07-01       Impact factor: 12.531

2.  Spatial localization of m-calpain to the plasma membrane by phosphoinositide biphosphate binding during epidermal growth factor receptor-mediated activation.

Authors:  Hanshuang Shao; Jeff Chou; Catherine J Baty; Nancy A Burke; Simon C Watkins; Donna Beer Stolz; Alan Wells
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 4.272

Review 3.  Calpains as potential anti-cancer targets.

Authors:  Ludovic Leloup; Alan Wells
Journal:  Expert Opin Ther Targets       Date:  2011-01-19       Impact factor: 6.902

4.  Autotaxin and lysophosphatidic acid stimulate intestinal cell motility by redistribution of the actin modifying protein villin to the developing lamellipodia.

Authors:  Seema Khurana; Alok Tomar; Sudeep P George; Yaohong Wang; Mohammad Rizwan Siddiqui; Huazhang Guo; Gabor Tigyi; Sijo Mathew
Journal:  Exp Cell Res       Date:  2007-11-12       Impact factor: 3.905

5.  Gene expression profiling analysis of osteosarcoma cell lines.

Authors:  Lu Sun; Jie Li; Bing Yan
Journal:  Mol Med Rep       Date:  2015-06-18       Impact factor: 2.952

6.  Phospholipase C and cofilin are required for carcinoma cell directionality in response to EGF stimulation.

Authors:  Ghassan Mouneimne; Lilian Soon; Vera DesMarais; Mazen Sidani; Xiaoyan Song; Shu-Chin Yip; Mousumi Ghosh; Robert Eddy; Jonathan M Backer; John Condeelis
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  2004-08-30       Impact factor: 10.539

  6 in total

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