Nuclear cytokine-activated IKKalpha controls prostate cancer metastasis by repressing Maspin.

Nature

Laboratory of Gene Regulation and Signal Transduction, Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Center, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093-0723, USA.

Published: April 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Inflammation boosts tumor growth through mechanisms dependent on NF-kappaB and is linked to metastasis via epithelial-mesenchymal transition.
  • A study identified IKKalpha, activated by RANK, as a key player in mammary cell growth during pregnancy and explored its role in prostate cancer.
  • Mutations preventing IKKalpha activation reduced prostate cancer growth and metastasis in mice, with rising Maspin levels indicating a potential suppressive effect on metastasis when IKKalpha is inhibited.

Article Abstract

Inflammation enhances tumour promotion through NF-kappaB-dependent mechanisms. NF-kappaB was also proposed to promote metastatogenesis through epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Yet a mechanistic link between inflammation and metastasis is missing. We identified a role for IkappaB kinase alpha (IKKalpha), activated by receptor activator of NF-kappaB (RANK/TNFRSF11A), in mammary epithelial proliferation during pregnancy. Owing to similarities between mammary and prostate epithelia, we examined IKKalpha involvement in prostate cancer and its progression. Here we show that a mutation that prevents IKKalpha activation slows down CaP growth and inhibits metastatogenesis in TRAMP mice, which express SV40 T antigen in the prostate epithelium. Decreased metastasis correlated with elevated expression of the metastasis suppressor Maspin, the ablation of which restored metastatic activity. IKKalpha activation by RANK ligand (RANKL/TNFSF11) inhibits Maspin expression in prostate epithelial cells, whereas repression of Maspin transcription requires nuclear translocation of active IKKalpha. The amount of active nuclear IKKalpha in mouse and human prostate cancer correlates with metastatic progression, reduced Maspin expression and infiltration of prostate tumours with RANKL-expressing inflammatory cells. We propose that tumour-infiltrating RANKL-expressing cells lead to nuclear IKKalpha activation and inhibition of Maspin transcription, thereby promoting the metastatic phenotype.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature05656DOI Listing

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