Ras and TGFβ cooperatively regulate epithelial cell plasticity and metastasis: dissection of Ras signaling pathways

E Janda, K Lehmann, I Killisch, M Jechlinger… - The Journal of cell …, 2002 - rupress.org
E Janda, K Lehmann, I Killisch, M Jechlinger, M Herzig, J Downward, H Beug, S Grünert
The Journal of cell biology, 2002rupress.org
Multistep carcinogenesis involves more than six discrete events also important in normal
development and cell behavior. Of these, local invasion and metastasis cause most cancer
deaths but are the least well understood molecularly. We employed a combined in vitro/in
vivo carcinogenesis model, that is, polarized Ha-Ras–transformed mammary epithelial cells
(EpRas), to dissect the role of Ras downstream signaling pathways in epithelial cell
plasticity, tumorigenesis, and metastasis. Ha-Ras cooperates with transforming growth factor …
Multistep carcinogenesis involves more than six discrete events also important in normal development and cell behavior. Of these, local invasion and metastasis cause most cancer deaths but are the least well understood molecularly. We employed a combined in vitro/in vivo carcinogenesis model, that is, polarized Ha-Ras–transformed mammary epithelial cells (EpRas), to dissect the role of Ras downstream signaling pathways in epithelial cell plasticity, tumorigenesis, and metastasis. Ha-Ras cooperates with transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) to cause epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) characterized by spindle-like cell morphology, loss of epithelial markers, and induction of mesenchymal markers. EMT requires continuous TGFβ receptor (TGFβ-R) and oncogenic Ras signaling and is stabilized by autocrine TGFβ production. In contrast, fibroblast growth factors, hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor, or TGFβ alone induce scattering, a spindle-like cell phenotype fully reversible after factor withdrawal, which does not involve sustained marker changes. Using specific inhibitors and effector-specific Ras mutants, we show that a hyperactive Raf/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) is required for EMT, whereas activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) causes scattering and protects from TGFβ-induced apoptosis. Hyperactivation of the PI3K pathway or the Raf/MAPK pathway are sufficient for tumorigenesis, whereas EMT in vivo and metastasis required a hyperactive Raf/MAPK pathway. Thus, EMT seems to be a close in vitro correlate of metastasis, both requiring synergism between TGFβ-R and Raf/MAPK signaling.
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