Kinase-Dependent and -Independent Roles of EphA2 in the Regulation of Prostate Cancer Invasion and Metastasis

被引:100
作者
Taddei, Maria Letizia [1 ,4 ]
Parri, Matteo [1 ,4 ]
Angelucci, Adriano [5 ]
Onnis, Barbara [1 ,4 ]
Bianchini, Francesca [2 ,3 ]
Giannoni, Elisa [1 ,4 ]
Raugei, Giovanni [1 ,4 ]
Calorini, Lido [2 ,3 ]
Rucci, Nadia [5 ]
Teti, Anna [5 ]
Bologna, Mauro [5 ]
Chiarugi, Paola [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florence, Dept Biochem Sci, Study Mol & Clin Level Chron Inflammatory Degener, I-50134 Florence, Italy
[2] Univ Florence, Dept Expt Pathol, Study Mol & Clin Level Chron Inflammatory Degener, I-50134 Florence, Italy
[3] Univ Florence, Dept Oncol, Study Mol & Clin Level Chron Inflammatory Degener, I-50134 Florence, Italy
[4] Univ Florence, Ctr Res Transfer & High Educ, Study Mol & Clin Level Chron Inflammatory Degener, I-50134 Florence, Italy
[5] Univ Aquila, Dept Expt Med, I-67100 Laquila, Italy
关键词
RECEPTOR TYROSINE KINASE; VASCULAR SMOOTH-MUSCLE; CELL-MIGRATION; IN-VIVO; PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA; TUMOR ANGIOGENESIS; E-CADHERIN; OVEREXPRESSION; FAMILY; ADHESION;
D O I
10.2353/ajpath.2009.080473
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 ;
摘要
Ligand-activated Eph tyrosine kinases regulate cellular repulsion, morphology, adhesion, and motility. EphA2 kinase is frequently up-regulated in several different types of cancers, including prostate, breast, colon, and lung carcinomas, as well as in melanoma. The existing data do not clarify whether EphA2 receptor phosphorylation or its simple overexpression, which likely leads to Eph kinase-independent responses, plays a role in the progression of malignant prostate cancer. In this study, we address the role of EphA2 tyrosine phosphorylation in prostate carcinoma cell adhesion, motility, invasion, and formation of metastases. Tumor cells expressing kinase-deficient EphA2 mutants, as well as an EphA2 variant lacking the cytoplasmic domain, are defective in ephrinA1-mediated cell rounding, retraction fiber formation, de-adhesion from the extracellular matrix, RhoA and Rac1 GTPase regulation, three-dimensional matrix invasion, and in vivo metastasis, suggesting a key role for EphA2 kinase activity. Nevertheless, EphA2 regulation of cell motility and invasion, as well as the formation of bone and visceral tumor colonies, reveals a component of both EphA2 kinase-dependent and -independent features. These results uncover a differential requirement for EphA2 kinase activity in the regulation of prostate carcinoma metastasis outcome, suggesting that although the kinase activity of EphA2 is required for the regulation of cell adhesion and cytoskeletal rearrangement, some distinct kinase-de-pendent and -independent pathways likely cooperate to drive cancer cell migration, invasion, and metastasis outcome. (Am J Pathol 2009, 174:1492-1503, DOI: 10.2353/ajpath.2009.080473)
引用
收藏
页码:1492 / 1503
页数:12
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