Trask loss enhances tumorigenic growth by liberating integrin signaling and growth factor receptor cross-talk in unanchored cells.

Cancer Res

Department of Medicine, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.

Published: February 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • The glycoprotein Trask/CDCP1 plays a role in preventing excessive cell growth by inhibiting integrin clustering and signaling, especially in epithelial cells that have lost their attachment.
  • Research using mice without Trask revealed that tumors developed faster in these animals, indicating that Trask functions as a tumor suppressor.
  • The study found that the absence of Trask led to increased integrin signaling and growth factor receptor interactions in cells not properly anchored, suggesting that Trask helps maintain normal growth constraints in epithelial cells.

Article Abstract

The cell surface glycoprotein Trask/CDCP1 is phosphorylated during anchorage loss in epithelial cells in which it inhibits integrin clustering, outside-in signaling, and cell adhesion. Its role in cancer has been difficult to understand, because of the lack of a discernible pattern in its various alterations in cancer cells. To address this issue, we generated mice lacking Trask function. Mammary tumors driven by the PyMT oncogene and skin tumors driven by the SmoM2 oncogene arose with accelerated kinetics in Trask-deficient mice, establishing a tumor suppressing function for this gene. Mechanistic investigations in mammary tumor cell lines derived from wild-type or Trask-deficient mice revealed a derepression of integrin signaling and an enhancement of integrin-growth factor receptor cross-talk, specifically in unanchored cell states. A similar restrictive link between anchorage and growth in untransformed epithelial cells was observed and disrupted by elimination of Trask. Together our results establish a tumor-suppressing function in Trask that restricts epithelial cell growth to the anchored state.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3563920PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-12-2496DOI Listing

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