TY - JOUR
T1 - ΔNp63α silences a miRNA program to aberrantly initiate a wound-healing program that promotes TGFβ-induced metastasis
AU - Calleja, Lidia Rodriguez
AU - Jacques, Camille
AU - Lamoureux, François
AU - Baud'Huin, Marc
AU - Gabriel, Marta Tellez
AU - Quillard, Thibaut
AU - Sahay, Debashish
AU - Perrot, Pierre
AU - Amiaud, Jerome
AU - Charrier, Celine
AU - Brion, Regis
AU - Lecanda, Fernando
AU - Verrecchia, Franck
AU - Heymann, Dominique
AU - Ellisen, Leif W.
AU - Ory, Benjamin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2016 AACR.
PY - 2016/6/1
Y1 - 2016/6/1
N2 - Primary cancer cell dissemination is a key event during the metastatic cascade, but context-specific determinants of this process remain largely undefined. Multiple reports have suggested that the p53 (TP53) family member p63 (TP63) plays an antimetastatic role through its minor epithelial isoform containing the N-terminal transactivation domain (TAp63). However, the role and contribution of the major p63 isoform lacking this domain, ΔNp63α, remain largely undefined. Here, we report a distinct and TAp63-independent mechanism by which ΔNp63α-expressing cells within a TGFβ-rich microenvironment become positively selected for metastatic dissemination. Orthotopic transplantation of ΔNp63α-expressing human osteosarcoma cells into athymic mice resulted in larger and more frequent lung metastases than transplantation of control cells. Mechanistic investigations revealed that ΔNp63α repressed miR-527 and miR-665, leading to the upregulation of two TGFβ effectors, SMAD4 and TβRII (TGFBR2). Furthermore, we provide evidence that this mechanism reflects a fundamental role for ΔNp63α in the normal wound-healing response. We show that ΔNp63α-mediated repression of miR-527/665 controls a TGFβ-dependent signaling node that switches off antimigratory miR-198 by suppressing the expression of the regulatory factor, KSRP (KHSRP). Collectively, these findings reveal that a novel miRNA network involved in the regulation of physiologic wound-healing responses is hijacked and suppressed by tumor cells to promote metastatic dissemination.
AB - Primary cancer cell dissemination is a key event during the metastatic cascade, but context-specific determinants of this process remain largely undefined. Multiple reports have suggested that the p53 (TP53) family member p63 (TP63) plays an antimetastatic role through its minor epithelial isoform containing the N-terminal transactivation domain (TAp63). However, the role and contribution of the major p63 isoform lacking this domain, ΔNp63α, remain largely undefined. Here, we report a distinct and TAp63-independent mechanism by which ΔNp63α-expressing cells within a TGFβ-rich microenvironment become positively selected for metastatic dissemination. Orthotopic transplantation of ΔNp63α-expressing human osteosarcoma cells into athymic mice resulted in larger and more frequent lung metastases than transplantation of control cells. Mechanistic investigations revealed that ΔNp63α repressed miR-527 and miR-665, leading to the upregulation of two TGFβ effectors, SMAD4 and TβRII (TGFBR2). Furthermore, we provide evidence that this mechanism reflects a fundamental role for ΔNp63α in the normal wound-healing response. We show that ΔNp63α-mediated repression of miR-527/665 controls a TGFβ-dependent signaling node that switches off antimigratory miR-198 by suppressing the expression of the regulatory factor, KSRP (KHSRP). Collectively, these findings reveal that a novel miRNA network involved in the regulation of physiologic wound-healing responses is hijacked and suppressed by tumor cells to promote metastatic dissemination.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84975057032&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-15-2317
DO - 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-15-2317
M3 - Article
C2 - 26988989
AN - SCOPUS:84975057032
SN - 0008-5472
VL - 76
SP - 3236
EP - 3251
JO - Cancer Research
JF - Cancer Research
IS - 11
ER -