Author:
Deng Wentao,Fernandez Audry,McLaughlin Sarah L.,Klinke David J.
Abstract
ABSTRACTBesides intrinsic changes, malignant cells release soluble signals to reshape their microenvironment. Among the signaling factors is WNT1 inducible signaling pathway protein 1 (WISP1), a secreted matricellular protein that is elevated in a variety of cancers including melanoma and is associated with reduced overall survival of patients diagnosed with primary melanoma. In this work, we found thatWISP1knockout both increased cell proliferation and repressed wound healing, migration and invasion of mouse and human melanoma cells in an ensemble ofin vitroassays.In vivometastasis assays showed that WISP1 knockout repressed tumor metastasis in both C57BL/6Ncrl and NOD-scid IL2Rgammanull (NSG) mice with B16F10 and YUMM1.7 melanoma cells. Mechanistically, B16F10 cells that invaded in a transwell assay possessed a gene expression signature similar to Epithelial - Mesenchymal Transition (EMT), including coincident repression of E-cadherin and induction of fibronectin and N-cadherin. Upon WISP1 knockout, these EMT signature genes went in opposite directions in both mouse and human cell lines and were rescued by media containing WISP1 or recombinant WISP1 protein.In vivo,metastasis repression by WISP1 knockout was reversed by the reintroduction of either WISP1 or SNAI1. A set of EMT gene activation and inhibition experiments using recombinant WISP1 or kinase inhibitors in B16F10 and YUMM1.7 cells suggested that WISP1 activates Akt and MAP kinase signaling pathways to shift melanoma cells from a proliferative to invasive phenotype. Collectively, the results supported a model that WISP1 within the tumor microenvironment stimulates melanoma invasion and metastasis by promoting an EMT-like process.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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