Skip to main content

A requirement for p120-catenin in the metastasis of invasive ductal breast cancer.

Citation
Kurley, S. J., et al. “A Requirement For P120-Catenin In The Metastasis Of Invasive Ductal Breast Cancer.”. Journal Of Cell Science.
Center Vanderbilt University
Author Sarah J Kurley, Verena Tischler, Brian Bierie, Sergey Novitskiy V, Aurelia Noske, Zsuzsanna Varga, Ursina Zürrer-Härdi, Simone Brandt, Robert H Carnahan, Rebecca S Cook, William J Muller, Ann Richmond, Albert B Reynolds
Keywords Breast metastasis, Colonization, p120 catenin
Abstract

We report here the effects of targeted p120-catenin (encoded by ; hereafter denoted p120) knockout (KO) in a PyMT mouse model of invasive ductal (mammary) cancer (IDC). Mosaic p120 ablation had little effect on primary tumor growth but caused significant pro-metastatic alterations in the tumor microenvironment, ultimately leading to a marked increase in the number and size of pulmonary metastases. Surprisingly, although early effects of p120-ablation included decreased cell-cell adhesion and increased invasiveness, cells lacking p120 were almost entirely unable to colonized distant metastatic sites The relevance of this observation to human IDC was established by analysis of a large clinical dataset of 1126 IDCs. As reported by others, p120 downregulation in primary IDC predicted worse overall survival. However, as in the mice, distant metastases were almost invariably p120 positive, even in matched cases where the primary tumors were p120 negative. Collectively, our results demonstrate a strong positive role for p120 (and presumably E-cadherin) during metastatic colonization of distant sites. On the other hand, downregulation of p120 in the primary tumor enhanced metastatic dissemination indirectly via pro-metastatic conditioning of the tumor microenvironment.

Year of Publication
2021
Journal
Journal of cell science
Volume
134
Issue
6
Date Published
03/2021
ISSN Number
1477-9137
DOI
10.1242/jcs.250639
Alternate Journal
J Cell Sci
PMID
33097605
PMCID
PMC7990862
Download citation