TY - JOUR
T1 - The invadopodia scaffold protein Tks5 is required for the growth of human breast cancer cells in vitro and in vivo
AU - Blouw, Barbara
AU - Patel, Manishha
AU - Iizuka, Shinji
AU - Abdullah, Christopher
AU - You, Weon Kyoo
AU - Huang, Xiayu
AU - Li, Jian Liang
AU - Diaz, Begoña
AU - Stallcup, William B.
AU - Courtneidge, Sara A.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Dr. D. Wiederschain for gifts of reagents. We also acknowledge Dr. Robert Oshima and members of his laboratory for advice and help with orthotopic mouse injections, Dr. Ranjan Perrera and Dr. Brian James for advice on RNAseq analysis, Robbin Newlin for assistance with immunohistochemistry, and Chun-Teng Huang for lentivirus packaging. We acknowledge the use of tissues procured by the National Disease Research Interchange with support from NIH grant 5 U42 RR006042. Barbara Blouw was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the California Breast Cancer Research Program. Manishha Patel was supported by a FRSQ Postdoctoral Fellowship from Quebec, Canada. This work was supported in part by grants CA129686 and CA154002 (Sara A. Courtneidge) and RO1 CA095287 (William B. Stallcup) from the National Cancer Institute.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Blouw et al.
PY - 2015/3/31
Y1 - 2015/3/31
N2 - The ability of cancer cells to invade underlies metastatic progression. One mechanism by which cancer cells can become invasive is through the formation of structures called invadopodia, which are dynamic, actin-rich membrane protrusions that are sites of focal extracellular matrix degradation. While there is a growing consensus that invadopodia are instrumental in tumor metastasis, less is known about whether they are involved in tumor growth, particularly in vivo. The adaptor protein Tks5 is an obligate component of invadopodia, and is linked molecularly to both actin-remodeling proteins and pericellular proteases. Tks5 appears to localize exclusively to invadopodia in cancer cells, and in vitro studies have demonstrated its critical requirement for the invasive nature of these cells, making it an ideal surrogate to investigate the role of invadopodia in vivo. In this study, we examined how Tks5 contributes to human breast cancer progression. We used immunohistochemistry and RNA sequencing data to evaluate Tks5 expression in clinical samples, and we characterized the role of Tks5 in breast cancer progression using RNA interference and orthotopic implantation in SCID-Beige mice.We found that Tks5 is expressed to high levels in approximately 50% of primary invasive breast cancers. Furthermore, high expression was correlated with poor outcome, particularly in those patients with late relapse of stage I/II disease. Knockdown of Tks5 expression in breast cancer cells resulted in decreased growth, both in 3D in vitro cultures and in vivo. Moreover, our data also suggest that Tks5 is important for the integrity and permeability of the tumor vasculature. Together, this work establishes an important role for Tks5 in tumor growth in vivo, and suggests that invadopodia may play broad roles in tumor progression.
AB - The ability of cancer cells to invade underlies metastatic progression. One mechanism by which cancer cells can become invasive is through the formation of structures called invadopodia, which are dynamic, actin-rich membrane protrusions that are sites of focal extracellular matrix degradation. While there is a growing consensus that invadopodia are instrumental in tumor metastasis, less is known about whether they are involved in tumor growth, particularly in vivo. The adaptor protein Tks5 is an obligate component of invadopodia, and is linked molecularly to both actin-remodeling proteins and pericellular proteases. Tks5 appears to localize exclusively to invadopodia in cancer cells, and in vitro studies have demonstrated its critical requirement for the invasive nature of these cells, making it an ideal surrogate to investigate the role of invadopodia in vivo. In this study, we examined how Tks5 contributes to human breast cancer progression. We used immunohistochemistry and RNA sequencing data to evaluate Tks5 expression in clinical samples, and we characterized the role of Tks5 in breast cancer progression using RNA interference and orthotopic implantation in SCID-Beige mice.We found that Tks5 is expressed to high levels in approximately 50% of primary invasive breast cancers. Furthermore, high expression was correlated with poor outcome, particularly in those patients with late relapse of stage I/II disease. Knockdown of Tks5 expression in breast cancer cells resulted in decreased growth, both in 3D in vitro cultures and in vivo. Moreover, our data also suggest that Tks5 is important for the integrity and permeability of the tumor vasculature. Together, this work establishes an important role for Tks5 in tumor growth in vivo, and suggests that invadopodia may play broad roles in tumor progression.
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U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0121003
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0121003
M3 - Article
C2 - 25826475
AN - SCOPUS:84926432074
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 10
JO - PloS one
JF - PloS one
IS - 3
M1 - e0121003
ER -