| Literature DB >> 24710625 |
Silvia Balabanova1, Chris Holmberg1, Islay Steele1, Bahram Ebrahimi2, Lucille Rainbow2, Ted Burdyga1, Cathy McCaig1, Lazso Tiszlavicz3, Nantaporn Lertkowit1, Olivier T Giger1, Simon Oliver1, Ian Prior1, Rod Dimaline1, Deborah Simpson2, Rob Beynon2, Peter Hegyi4, Timothy C Wang5, Graham J Dockray1, Andrea Varro6.
Abstract
Stromal cells influence cancer progression. Myofibroblasts are an important stromal cell type, which influence the tumour microenvironment by release of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins, proteases, cytokines and chemokines. The mechanisms of secretion are poorly understood. Here, we describe the secretion of marker proteins in gastric cancer and control myofibroblasts in response to insulin-like growth factor (IGF) stimulation and, using functional genomic approaches, we identify proteins influencing the secretory response. IGF rapidly increased myofibroblast secretion of an ECM protein, TGFβig-h3. The secretory response was not blocked by inhibition of protein synthesis and was partially mediated by increased intracellular calcium (Ca(2+)). The capacity for evoked secretion was associated with the presence of dense-core secretory vesicles and was lost in cells from patients with advanced gastric cancer. In cells responding to IGF-II, the expression of neuroendocrine marker proteins, including secretogranin-II and proenkephalin, was identified by gene array and LC-MS/MS respectively, and verified experimentally. The expression of proenkephalin was decreased in cancers from patients with advanced disease. Inhibition of secretogranin-II expression decreased the secretory response to IGF, and its over-expression recovered the secretory response consistent with a role in secretory vesicle biogenesis. We conclude that normal and some gastric cancer myofibroblasts have a neuroendocrine-like phenotype characterized by Ca(2+)-dependent regulated secretion, dense-core secretory vesicles and expression of neuroendocrine marker proteins; loss of the phenotype is associated with advanced cancer. A failure to regulate myofibroblast protein secretion may contribute to cancer progression.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24710625 PMCID: PMC4123646 DOI: 10.1093/carcin/bgu086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carcinogenesis ISSN: 0143-3334 Impact factor: 4.944