Overexpression of NaV 1.6 channels is associated with the invasion capacity of human cervical cancer.

Int J Cancer

División de Neurociencias, Departamento de Neuropatología Molecular, Instituto de Fisiología Celular, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México, DF, México.

Published: May 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the role of voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSC) in cervical cancer (CaC), finding that the Na(V) 1.6 subunit is significantly upregulated in CaC samples compared to noncancerous cervical biopsies.
  • Quantitative PCR results indicated that both Na(V) 1.6 and Na(V) 1.7 mRNA levels were much higher in CaC, and immunolocalization showed altered protein distribution in cancer cells.
  • While blocking VGSC did not decrease cell proliferation or migration, it did reduce the invasiveness of CaC cells, suggesting Na(V) 1.6 could be a potential marker for cancer metastasis.

Article Abstract

Functional activity of voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSC) has been associated to the invasion and metastasis behaviors of prostate, breast and some other types of cancer. We previously reported the functional expression of VGSC in primary cultures and biopsies derived from cervical cancer (CaC). Here, we investigate the relative expression levels of VGSC subunits and its possible role in CaC. Quantitative real-time PCR revealed that mRNA levels of Na(V) 1.6 α-subunit in CaC samples were ∼40-fold higher than in noncancerous cervical (NCC) biopsies. A Na(V) 1.7 α-subunit variant also showed increased mRNA levels in CaC (∼20-fold). All four Na(V) β subunits were also detected in CaC samples, being Na(V) β1 the most abundant. Proteins of Na(V) 1.6 and Na(V) 1.7 α-subunits were immunolocalized in both NCC and CaC biopsies and in CaC primary cultures as well; however, although in NCC sections proteins were mainly relegated to the plasma membrane, in CaC biopsies and primary cultures the respective signal was stronger and widely distributed in both cytoplasm and plasma membrane. Functional activity of Na(V) 1.6 channels in the plasma membrane of CaC cells was confirmed by whole-cell patch-clamp experiments using Cn2, a Na(V) 1.6-specific toxin, which blocked ∼30% of the total sodium current. Blocking of sodium channels VGSC with tetrodotoxin and Cn2 did not affect proliferation neither migration, but reduced by ∼20% the invasiveness of CaC primary culture cells in vitro assays. We conclude that Na(V) 1.6 is upregulated in CaC and could serve as a novel molecular marker for the metastatic behavior of this carcinoma.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijc.26210DOI Listing

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