4.6 Article

Tumor-associated myoepithelial cells promote the invasive progression of ductal carcinoma in situ through activation of TGFβ signaling

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 292, Issue 27, Pages 11466-11484

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.775080

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Funding

  1. NCI, National Institutes of Health [R01 CA157779, R01 CA163820]

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The normal myoepithelium has a tumor-suppressing nature and inhibits the progression of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) into invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC). Conversely, a growing number of studies have shown that tumor-associated myoepithelial cells have a tumor-promoting effect. Moreover, the exact role of tumor-associated myoepithelial cells in the DCIS-to-IDC development remains undefined. To address this, we explored the role of tumor-associated myoepithelial cells in the DCIS-toIDC progression. We developed a direct coculture system to study the cell-cell interactions between DCIS cells and tumorassociated myoepithelial cells. Coculture studies indicated that tumor-associated myoepithelial cells promoted the invasive progression of a DCIS cell model in vitro, and mechanistic studies revealed that the interaction with DCIS cells stimulated tumor-associated myoepithelial cells to secrete TGF beta 1, which subsequently contributed to activating the TGF beta/Smads pathway in DCIS cells. We noted that activation of the TGF beta signaling pathway promoted the epithelial-mesenchymal transition, basal-like phenotypes, stemness, and invasiveness of DCIS cells. Importantly, xenograft studies further demonstrated that tumor-associated myoepithelial cells enhanced the DCIS-toIDC progression in vivo. Furthermore, we found that TGF beta mediated induction of oncogenic miR-10b-5p expression and down-regulation of RB1CC1, a miR-10b-5p-targeted tumorsuppressor gene, contributed to the invasive progression of DCIS. Our findings provide the first experimental evidence to directly support the paradigm that altered DCIS-associated myoepithelial cells promote the invasive progression of DCIS into IDC via TGF beta signaling activation.

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