Lecture 20: Metastasis - Epithelial organisation and regulation Flashcards

1
Q

What can prevent metastasis into new tissue sites?

A
  1. Tissue archeticture: connective tissue, basement membrane, junctions
  2. Blood vessel structure: basement membrane,
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2
Q

How do cells migrate and invade?

A

Epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT)

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3
Q

What are the classifications of EMT?

A

Type 1: embryonic development
Type 2: Wound healing and tissue regeneration in adult tissues
Type 3: cancer

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4
Q

What are the features of EMT cells

A

Spindle-shaped
Anterior-posterior polarisation
Weak cell:cell adhesion
Atered cell:ECM adhesion

=

Strong potential for migration
Invasive - production of enzyme which degrade ECM (proteases)

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5
Q

How is EMT induced?

A

Multiple signals required for initiation and maintaining EMT

Req signals from epithelial (cancer) and stromal cells

Hepatocyte GF (ligand) - Met (receptor) pathway
^^^ HGF SIGNALLING
1. produced by a variety of stromal cells
2. Receptor Met found on epithelial cells
3. HGF capable of produced many of EMT associated changes

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6
Q

How is EMT coordinated?

A

Small number of transcription factors that work in combinations, often inducing the expression of each other

TF e.gs.,
Snail
Slug
Twist
etc

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7
Q

What is the evidence for Twist’s role in metastasis

A

Promotes metastasis but not primary tumour growth

Spontaneous metastasis assay:
1. injected highly metastatic breast cancer cells to mammary fat pad
2. siRNA was used to KO Twist expression
3. Reduction in metastasis but no change in tumour growth

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8
Q

What is the role of E-cadherin in signalling pathways?

A

Oncogenic signalling pathways for: migration, invasion, proliferation

EMT state = loss of E-cadherin

Wnt pathway
1. Regulates cell migration and proliferation
2. Associated with several cancers: GI, breast, melanoma

Other pathways
1. EGFR
2. c-Met
3. PI3K/AKT
4. Rho GTPase
5. Ras
6. Rac
7. MAPK
8. HIPPO

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9
Q

What is the importance of the E to N-cadherin switch?

A

N-cadherin increases cancer cell affinity to surrounding stromal cells normally displaying N-cadherin

melanoma cells: N-chaderin
1. bind to fibroblasts and endothelial cells
2. Facilitates invasion into dermal stroma

Loss of E-cadherin leads to more invasive and malignant phenotype

Evidence: In vitro
1. antibodies against E-cadherin can block adhesion of normal epithelial cells to each other, leading to invasion of collegen gels

In vivo
1. staining for E-cadherin
2. Strong in central tumour
3. Disappears in cells at invasive edge

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10
Q

What is the evidence for intergrin roles in cancer?

A

Blockade of integrin adhesino with RGD-containing peptides can block metastasis

Experimental metastasis assay:
1. injected B16-F10 melanoma cells + GRGDS peptide which competes for adhesion to integrin
2. reduced lung tumour metastasis with increasing dose of peptide

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