| Literature DB >> 22791810 |
Anatoliy Samoylenko1, Bozhena Vynnytska-Myronovska, Nadiya Byts, Nina Kozlova, Olga Basaraba, Ganna Pasichnyk, Kseniya Palyvoda, Yaroslav Bobak, Maryna Barska, Oksana Mayevska, Yuriy Rzhepetsky, Halyna Shuvayeva, Valeriy Lyzogubov, Vasyl Usenko, Volodymyr Savran, Nataliya Volodko, Vladimir Buchman, Thomas Kietzmann, Lyudmyla Drobot.
Abstract
The adaptor protein regulator for ubiquitous kinase/c-Cbl-interacting protein of 85kDa (Ruk/CIN85) was found to modulate HER1/EGFR signaling and processes like cell adhesion and apoptosis. Although these features imply a role in carcinogenesis, it is so far unknown how and by which molecular mechanisms Ruk/CIN85 could affect a certain tumor phenotype. By analyzing samples from breast cancer patients, we found high levels of Ruk(l)/CIN85 especially in lymph node metastases from patients with invasive breast adenocarcinomas, suggesting that Ruk(l)/CIN85 contributes to malignancy. Expression of Ruk(l)/CIN85 in weakly invasive breast adenocarcinoma cells deficient of Ruk(l)/CIN85 indeed converted them into more malignant cells. In particular, Ruk(l)/CIN85 reduced the growth rate, decreased cell adhesion, enhanced anchorage-independent growth, increased motility in both transwell migration and wound healing assays as well as affected the response to epidermal growth factor. Thereby, Ruk(l)/CIN85 led to a more rapid and prolonged epidermal growth factor-dependent activation of Src, Akt and ERK1/2 and treatment with the Src inhibitor PP2 and the PI3K inhibitor LY294002 abolished the Ruk(l)/CIN85-dependent changes in cell motility. Together, this study indicates that high levels of Ruk(l)/CIN85 contribute to the conversion of breast adenocarcinoma cells into a more malignant phenotype via modulation of the Src/Akt pathway.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22791810 DOI: 10.1093/carcin/bgs228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carcinogenesis ISSN: 0143-3334 Impact factor: 4.944