Tumour-associated tenascin-C isoforms promote breast cancer cell invasion and growth by matrix metalloproteinase-dependent and independent mechanisms
RA Hancox, MD Allen, DL Holliday, DR Edwards… - Breast Cancer …, 2009 - Springer
Breast Cancer Research, 2009•Springer
Introduction The stromal microenvironment has a profound influence on tumour cell
behaviour. In tumours, the extracellular matrix (ECM) composition differs from normal tissue
and allows novel interactions to influence tumour cell function. The ECM protein tenascin-C
(TNC) is frequently up-regulated in breast cancer and we have previously identified two
novel isoforms–one containing exon 16 (TNC-16) and one containing exons 14 plus 16
(TNC-14/16). Methods The present study has analysed the functional significance of this …
behaviour. In tumours, the extracellular matrix (ECM) composition differs from normal tissue
and allows novel interactions to influence tumour cell function. The ECM protein tenascin-C
(TNC) is frequently up-regulated in breast cancer and we have previously identified two
novel isoforms–one containing exon 16 (TNC-16) and one containing exons 14 plus 16
(TNC-14/16). Methods The present study has analysed the functional significance of this …
Introduction
The stromal microenvironment has a profound influence on tumour cell behaviour. In tumours, the extracellular matrix (ECM) composition differs from normal tissue and allows novel interactions to influence tumour cell function. The ECM protein tenascin-C (TNC) is frequently up-regulated in breast cancer and we have previously identified two novel isoforms – one containing exon 16 (TNC-16) and one containing exons 14 plus 16 (TNC-14/16).
Methods
The present study has analysed the functional significance of this altered TNC isoform profile in breast cancer. TNC-16 and TNC-14/16 splice variants were generated using PCR-ligation and over-expressed in breast cancer cells (MCF-7, T47D, MDA-MD-231, MDA-MB-468, GI101) and human fibroblasts. The effects of these variants on tumour cell invasion and proliferation were measured and compared with the effects of the large (TNC-L) and fully spliced small (TNC-S) isoforms.
Results
TNC-16 and TNC-14/16 significantly enhanced tumour cell proliferation (P < 0.05) and invasion, both directly (P < 0.01) and as a response to transfected fibroblast expression (P < 0.05) with this effect being dependent on tumour cell interaction with TNC, because TNC-blocking antibodies abrogated these responses. An analysis of 19 matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases 1 to 4 (TIMP 1 to 4) revealed that TNC up-regulated expression of MMP-13 and TIMP-3 two to four fold relative to vector, and invasion was reduced in the presence of MMP inhibitor GM6001. However, this effect was not isoform-specific but was elicited equally by all TNC isoforms.
Conclusions
These results demonstrate a dual requirement for TNC and MMP in enhancing breast cancer cell invasion, and identify a significant role for the tumour-associated TNC-16 and TNC-14/16 in promoting tumour invasion, although these isoform-specific effects appear to be mediated through MMP-independent mechanisms.
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