Epithelial Cell Plasticity in Development and Tumor Progression

被引:0
作者
Jean Paul Thiery
Dominique Chopin
机构
[1] UMR 144 CNRS,
[2] Laboratoire de Morphogenèse Cellulaire et Progression Tumorale,undefined
[3] Institut Curie,undefined
[4] Groupe d'Etude des Tumeurs Urologiques et Service d'Urologie,undefined
[5] Centre Hospitalier Henri Mondor,undefined
来源
Cancer and Metastasis Reviews | 1999年 / 18卷
关键词
carcinomas; epithelial–mesenchymal transition; growth factor signaling;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Various mechanisms of epithelial cell plasticity in morphogenesis have been studied at the genetic and molecular levels. Several control genes have been identified including genes encoding transcription factors and growth factor receptors. These mechanisms may be reactivated during the progression of carcinomas. One of the mechanisms underlying epithelial plasticity is the epithelial–mesenchymal transition. This process has been extensively studied using the NBT-II bladder carcinoma cell line. Cells of this line undergo a reversible transition following exposure to several growth factors including FGF1, EGF, TGFα and SF/HGF, which activate tyrosine kinase surface receptors. Two separate transduction pathways have been identified. The transient activation of c-Src is involved in cytoskeleton remodeling whereas the Ras pathway controls the transcription of genes such as the transcription factor Slug which is involved in the internalization of desmosomes. These two pathways cooperate to induce the morphological transition, scattering and locomotion of fibroblast-like cells. Growth/scatter factor-producing NBT-II cells are more invasive than cells that do not contain this factor, in orthotopic confrontation assay. In vivo, these cells are very tumorigenic and may confer a more malignant phenotype on parental cells via a community effect. The role of several growth factors and their receptors has been investigated in human bladder carcinomas. A subset of these tumors with poor outcomes produce low levels of FGFR2-IIIb. The synthesis of this receptor de novo in bladder cell lines reduces proliferation in vitro and tumor growth in nude mice. FGFR2-IIIb functions as a tumor suppressor, consistent with the differentiation-inducing capacities of FGF receptors in the suprabasal cells of the skin. FGFR2-IIIb signaling may be involved in the maintenance of E-cadherin, the prototype epithelial adhesion molecule, which is only downregulated in a fraction of tumors with low FGFR2-IIIb synthesis. Human bladder tumors may also activate autocrine loops such as that for EGFR and their ligands, as already demonstrated for murine bladder tumors. Therefore, our results suggest that multifunctional growth factors and their receptors are involved in cell proliferation and epithelial cell plasticity, acting either as positive or negative regulators of tumor progression. The effect on the morphological transition is also clearly relevant to the mechanism governing dissemination and the formation of micrometastatic tumor cells. The extrapolation of these discoveries to human carcinomas should provide markers facilitating the more accurate prediction of the biological behavior of a given tumor and identify clinically and pathologically significant parameters. The identification of critical changes in the growth factor pathways involved in tumor progression will not only provide insight into the genetic and molecular basis of this process, but should also identify targets for new therapies.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 42
页数:11
相关论文
共 338 条
[1]  
Lengauer C(1998)Genetic instabilities in human cancers Nature 396 643-649
[2]  
Kinzler KW(1997)Common patterns of genetic evolution in human solid tumors Cytometry 29 1-27
[3]  
Vogelstein B(1998)Presence of tumor cells in bone marrow but not in blood is associated with adverse prognosis in patients with Ewing's tumor J Clin Invest 16 1707-1711
[4]  
Shackney SE(1993)Micro satellite instability in cancer of the proximal colon Science 260 816-819
[5]  
Shankey TV(1993)Genomic instability in colorectal cancer: relationship to clinicopathological variables and family history Cancer Res 53 5849-5852
[6]  
Fagnou C(1997)Allelic imbalance and microsatellite instability in resected Duke's colorectal cancer Diagnost Mol Pathol 6 78-84
[7]  
Michon J(1998)Confirmation that chromosome 18q allelic loss in colon cancer is a prognostic indicator J Clin Onc 16 427-433
[8]  
Peter M(1998)Prognostic significance of allelic loss at chromosome 18q21 for stage II colorectal cancer Gastroenterology 114 1188-1195
[9]  
Oberlin O(1996)New perspectives in clinical oncology from angiogenesis research Eur J Cancer 32A 2534-2539
[10]  
Zucker JM(1997)Tumor angiogenesis and prognosis Histopathology 30 294-301