The High Mobility Group A1 (HMGA1) gene is highly overexpressed in human uterine serous carcinomas and carcinosarcomas and drives Matrix Metalloproteinase-2 …

J Hillion, S Roy, M Heydarian, L Cope, L Xian… - Gynecologic …, 2016 - Elsevier
J Hillion, S Roy, M Heydarian, L Cope, L Xian, M Koo, LZ Luo, K Kellyn, BM Ronnett, T Huso…
Gynecologic oncology, 2016Elsevier
Objectives Although uterine cancer is the fourth most common cause for cancer death in
women worldwide, the molecular underpinnings of tumor progression remain poorly
understood. The High Mobility Group A1 (HMGA1) gene is overexpressed in aggressive
cancers and high levels portend adverse outcomes in diverse tumors. We previously
reported that Hmga1a transgenic mice develop uterine tumors with complete penetrance.
Because HMGA1 drives tumor progression by inducing Matrix Metalloproteinase (MMP) and …
Objectives
Although uterine cancer is the fourth most common cause for cancer death in women worldwide, the molecular underpinnings of tumor progression remain poorly understood. The High Mobility Group A1 (HMGA1) gene is overexpressed in aggressive cancers and high levels portend adverse outcomes in diverse tumors. We previously reported that Hmga1a transgenic mice develop uterine tumors with complete penetrance. Because HMGA1 drives tumor progression by inducing Matrix Metalloproteinase (MMP) and other genes involved in invasion, we explored the HMGA1-MMP-2 pathway in uterine cancer.
Methods
To investigate MMP-2 in uterine tumors driven by HMGA1, we used a genetic approach with mouse models. Next, we assessed HMGA1 and MMP-2 expression in primary human uterine tumors, including low-grade carcinomas (endometrial endometrioid) and more aggressive tumors (endometrial serous carcinomas, uterine carcinosarcomas/malignant mesodermal mixed tumors).
Results
Here, we report for the first time that uterine tumor growth is impaired in Hmga1a transgenic mice crossed on to an Mmp-2 deficient background. In human tumors, we discovered that HMGA1 is highest in aggressive carcinosarcomas and serous carcinomas, with lower levels in the more indolent endometrioid carcinomas. Moreover, HMGA1 and MMP-2 were positively correlated, but only in a subset of carcinosarcomas. HMGA1 also occupies the MMP-2 promoter in human carcinosarcoma cells.
Conclusions
Together, our studies define a novel HMGA1-MMP-2 pathway involved in a subset of human carcinosarcomas and tumor progression in murine models. Our work also suggests that targeting HMGA1 could be effective adjuvant therapy for more aggressive uterine cancers and provides compelling data for further preclinical studies.
Elsevier