| Literature DB >> 23348745 |
Toshiaki Yoshioka1, Javier Otero, Yu Chen, Young-Mi Kim, Jason A Koutcher, Jaya Satagopan, Victor Reuter, Brett Carver, Elisa de Stanchina, Katsuhiko Enomoto, Norman M Greenberg, Peter T Scardino, Howard I Scher, Charles L Sawyers, Filippo G Giancotti.
Abstract
The contextual signals that regulate the expansion of prostate tumor progenitor cells are poorly defined. We found that a significant fraction of advanced human prostate cancers and castration-resistant metastases express high levels of the β4 integrin, which binds to laminin-5. Targeted deletion of the signaling domain of β4 inhibited prostate tumor growth and progression in response to loss of p53 and Rb function in a mouse model of prostate cancer (PB-TAg mice). Additionally, it suppressed Pten loss-driven prostate tumorigenesis in tissue recombination experiments. We traced this defect back to an inability of signaling-defective β4 to sustain self-renewal of putative cancer stem cells in vitro and proliferation of transit-amplifying cells in vivo. Mechanistic studies indicated that mutant β4 fails to promote transactivation of ErbB2 and c-Met in prostate tumor progenitor cells and human cancer cell lines. Pharmacological inhibition of ErbB2 and c-Met reduced the ability of prostate tumor progenitor cells to undergo self-renewal in vitro. Finally, we found that β4 is often coexpressed with c-Met and ErbB2 in human prostate cancers and that combined pharmacological inhibition of these receptor tyrosine kinases exerts antitumor activity in a mouse xenograft model. These findings indicate that the β4 integrin promotes prostate tumorigenesis by amplifying ErbB2 and c-Met signaling in tumor progenitor cells.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23348745 PMCID: PMC3561800 DOI: 10.1172/JCI60720
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808