Literature DB >> 20651243

Cigarette smoke induces epidermal growth factor receptor-dependent redistribution of apical MUC1 and junctional beta-catenin in polarized human airway epithelial cells.

Ying-Ting Chen1, Marianne Gallup, Karina Nikulina, Stanislav Lazarev, Lorna Zlock, Walter Finkbeiner, Nancy McNamara.   

Abstract

Cigarette smoke (CS) accounts for nearly 90% of lung cancer deaths worldwide; however, an incomplete understanding of how CS initiates preneoplastic changes in the normal airway hinders early diagnosis. Short-term exposure to CS causes aberrant activation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and canonical Wnt/beta-catenin signaling pathways in human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells. We hypothesize that this response is elicited through the disruption of spatially segregated cell membrane proteins in the polarized airway epithelium. Using an in vitro model of highly differentiated HBE cells, we observed membrane characteristics consistent with the native airway, including the presence of a membrane mucin, MUC1, at the apical cell pole, beta-catenin at the apical-lateral membrane, and EGFR at the basolateral membrane. Following exposure to smoke, intercellular spaces enlarge and cilia disappear. This histopathology is accompanied by molecular events that include perinuclear trafficking of basolateral EGFR, EGFR phosphorylation, pEGFR-mediated phosphorylation of MUC1's cytoplasmic tail (CT), loss of E-cadherin/beta-catenin complexes at the adherens junctions (AJs), intracellular formation and nuclear shuffling of beta-catenin/MUC1-CT complexes, and, ultimately, up-regulation and nuclear localization of Wnt nuclear effector, Lef-1. In the presence of EGFR inhibitor, AG1478, CS-induced histopathology and molecular events were inhibited. These data point to EGFR as a portal through which CS mediates its damaging effects on AJ-mediated cell polarity and activation of canonical Wnt/beta-catenin signaling.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20651243      PMCID: PMC2928959          DOI: 10.2353/ajpath.2010.091129

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9440            Impact factor:   4.307


  42 in total

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