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Mechanisms of oncogene-mediated alterations in metastatic ability. | LitMetric

Mechanisms of oncogene-mediated alterations in metastatic ability.

Biochem Cell Biol

London Regional Cancer Centre, University of Western Ontario, Canada.

Published: September 1992

Transfected ras oncogenes have been shown to induce metastatic properties in some cells. This altered behavior is likely due to changes in ras-mediated signal transduction pathways, resulting in altered expression of genes important to metastasis. Clarification of the mechanisms by which ras is able to induce metastatic ability in model systems will improve our understanding of tumor progression, even in those cells in which ras activation has not been implicated. Many of the consequences of ras expression also have been detected in cells that have become metastatic in the absence of altered ras, suggesting that there is a set of common changes that can lead to metastasis, with multiple signals capable of eliciting these changes. We have identified several changes in metastatic, ras-transformed NIH 3T3 cells that may contribute to their increased malignancy, including expression of proteolytic enzymes and their inhibitors, and adhesive and calcium-binding proteins. Not all cells, however, respond in this way to expression of oncogenic ras. We have found that murine LTA cells, which are tumorigenic but nonmetastatic, are ras resistant and remain nonmetastatic when expressing high levels of transfected ras, in contrast to NIH 3T3 cells, which are ras sensitive and become both tumorigenic and metastatic in response to comparable levels of ras. LTA cells differ in their patterns of gene expression in response to ras when compared with NIH 3T3 cells, suggesting that the two cell lines process the ras signal differently. Here we review our results with ras-transfected NIH 3T3 and LTA cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/o92-124DOI Listing

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