학술논문

Neuropilin-2 Expression Promotes TGF-&bgr;1-Mediated Epithelial to Mesenchymal Transition in Colorectal Cancer Cells.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS ONE. 2011, Vol. 6 Issue 7, p1-14. 14p.
Subject
*NEUROPILINS
*COLON cancer
*GROWTH factors
*CELLULAR signal transduction
*NEOVASCULARIZATION
*CANCER invasiveness
*SMALL interfering RNA
*XENOGRAFTS
*VIMENTIN
*SURFACE plasmon resonance
Language
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Neuropilins, initially characterized as neuronal receptors, act as co-receptors for cancer related growth factors and were recently involved in several signaling pathways leading to cytoskeletal organization, angiogenesis and cancer progression. Then, we sought to investigate the ability of neuropilin-2 to orchestrate epithelial-mesenchymal transition in colorectal cancer cells. Using specific siRNA to target neuropilin-2 expression, or gene transfer, we first observed that neuropilin-2 expression endows HT29 and Colo320 for xenograft formation. Moreover, neuropilin-2 conferred a fibroblastic-like shape to cancer cells, suggesting an involvement of neuropilin-2 in epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Indeed, the presence of neuropilin-2 in colorectal carcinoma cell lines was correlated with loss of epithelial markers such as cytokeratin-20 and Ecadherin and with acquisition of mesenchymal molecules such as vimentin. Furthermore, we showed by surface plasmon resonance experiments that neuropilin-2 is a receptor for transforming-growth factor-&bgr;1. The expression of neuropilin-2 on colon cancer cell lines was indeed shown to promote transforming-growth factor-&bgr;1 signaling, leading to a constitutive phosphorylation of the Smad2/3 complex. Treatment with specific TGFb-type1 receptor kinase inhibitors restored Ecadherin levels and inhibited in part neuropilin-2-induced vimentin expression, suggesting that neuropilin-2 cooperates with TGF&bgr;-type1 receptor to promote epithelial-mesenchymal transition in colorectal cancer cells. Our results suggest a direct role of NRP2 in epithelial-mesenchymal transition and highlight a cross-talk between neuropilin-2 and TGF-&bgr;1 signaling to promote cancer progression. These results suggest that neuropilin-2 fulfills all the criteria of a therapeutic target to disrupt multiple oncogenic functions in solid tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]