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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The most important factor in predicting outcome in patients with early breast cancer is the stage of the disease. There is no robust marker capable of identifying invasive carcinomas that despite their small size have a high metastatic potential, and that would benefit from more aggressive treatment.
RhoC
-GTPase is a member of the Ras-superfamily and is involved in cell polarity and motility. We hypothesized that
RhoC
expression would be a good marker to identify breast cancer patients with high risk of developing
metastases
, and that it would be a prognostic marker useful in the clinic. We developed a specific anti-
RhoC
antibody and studied archival breast tissues that comprise a broad spectrum of breast disease. One hundred eighty-two specimens from 164 patients were used. Immunohistochemistry was performed on formalin-fixed tissues. Staining intensity was graded 0 to 3+ (0 to 1+ was considered negative and 2 to 3+ was considered positive).
RhoC
was not expressed in any of the normal, fibrocystic changes, atypical hyperplasia, or ductal carcinoma in situ, but was expressed in 36 of 118 invasive carcinomas and strongly correlated with tumor stage (P = 0.01).
RhoC
had high specificity (88%) in detecting invasive carcinomas with metastatic potential. Of the invasive carcinomas smaller than 1 cm,
RhoC
was highly specific in detecting tumors that developed
metastases
.
RhoC
expression was associated with negative progesterone receptor and HER-2/neu overexpression. We characterized
RhoC
expression in human breast tissues.
RhoC
is specifically expressed in invasive breast carcinomas capable of metastasizing, and it may be clinically useful in patients with tumors smaller than 1 cm to guide treatment.
...
PMID:Characterization of RhoC expression in benign and malignant breast disease: a potential new marker for small breast carcinomas with metastatic ability. 1183 78
Once cancer cells have spread and formed secondary masses, breast cancers are largely incurable even with state-of-the-art medicine. To improve diagnosis and therapy, better markers are needed to distinguish cells which have a high probability for causing clinically relevant, macroscopic
metastases
. In this review, we summarize the several genes that regulate breast cancer metastasis. Two categories of genes are presented--metastasis activator (ras, MEK1, mta1, proteinases, adhesion molecules, chemoattractants/receptors, autotaxin, PKC, S100A4,
RhoC
, osteopontin) and metastasis suppressor (Nm23, E-cadherin, TIMPs, KiSS1, Kai1, Maspin, MKK4, BRMS1). While the mechanisms of action for most of these genes are not fully elucidated, some clues are emerging and are presented.
...
PMID:Genetic basis of human breast cancer metastasis. 1201 33
Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is the most lethal form of locally advanced breast cancer known. IBC carries a guarded prognosis primarily due to rapid onset of disease, typically within six months, and the propensity of tumor emboli to invade the dermal lymphatics and spread systemically. Although the clinical manifestations of IBC have been well documented, until recently little was known about the genetic mechanisms underlying the disease. In a comprehensive study aimed at identifying the molecular mechanisms responsible for the unique IBC phenotype, our laboratory identified overexpression of
RhoC
GTPase in over 90% of IBC tumors in contrast to 36% of stage-matched non-IBC tumors. We also demonstrated that overexpression of
RhoC
GTPase in human mammary epithelial (HME) cells nearly recapitulated the IBC phenotype with regards to invasion, motility and angiogenesis. In the current study we sought to delineate which signaling pathways were responsible for each aspect of the IBC phenotype. Using well-established inhibitors to the mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI3K) pathways. We found that activation of the MAPK pathway was responsible for motility, invasion and production of angiogenic factors. In contrast, growth under anchorage independent conditions was dependent on the PI3K pathway.
Clin Exp
Metastasis
2002
PMID:Mitogen activated protein kinase pathway is involved in RhoC GTPase induced motility, invasion and angiogenesis in inflammatory breast cancer. 1209 Apr 70
Melanoma is a deadly cancer due to its propensity to
metastasize
. Pharmacological inhibition of cell motility may benefit patients with cutaneous melanoma by preventing metastasis to internal organs. The Rho GTPases are signaling molecules that drive metastasis by controlling cell motility. We found
RhoC
to be expressed in clinical melanoma specimens and hypothesized that inhibiting its activation might prevent metastasis. Some Rho proteins, such as
RhoC
, depend on posttranslational geranylgeranylation for biological activity. We investigated the effect that Atorvastatin, a 3-hydroxy 3-methylglutaryl CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitor that prevents Rho geranylgeranylation, had on subcellular localization and activity of Rho proteins as well as the metastatic ability of melanoma cells. Atorvastatin inhibited Rho activation and reverted the metastatic phenotype of human melanoma cells in vitro. Moreover, Atorvastatin, at plasma levels comparable to those used to treat of hypercholesterolemia, inhibited in vivo metastasis of melanoma cells overexpressing
RhoC
. These results support further examination of statins for primary prophylaxis of melanoma metastasis.
...
PMID:Atorvastatin prevents RhoC isoprenylation, invasion, and metastasis in human melanoma cells. 1457 59
Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is the most deadly form of breast cancer in humans presumably due to its ability to
metastasize
from its inception. In our laboratory, overexpression of
RhoC
GTPase was observed to be specific for IBC tumors, but not for stage-matched, non-IBC tumors.
RhoC
is known to contribute to an IBC-like phenotype in HPV-E6E7 immortalized breast cells. To further study the effect of
RhoC
overexpression on IBC metastasis, we generated stable transfectants of spontaneous immortalized mammary epithelial cells (MCF10A) overexpressing wild-type
RhoC
or a constitutively active
RhoC
mutant (G14V). Both the
RhoC
wild type and the G14V transfectants were highly invasive and proliferated more rapidly compared to vector-only control clones. Overexpression of
RhoC
led to an increase in actin stress fiber and focal adhesion contact formation. Comparative microarray analysis of these clones further revealed that
RhoC
overexpression upregulated 108 genes whereas seven genes were down-regulated. We have further verified by quantitative RT-PCR that genes involved in cell proliferation, invasion/adhesion, and angiogenesis were modulated by
RhoC
. This work suggests strong candidates for the downstream oncogenic functions of
RhoC
.
...
PMID:RhoC induces differential expression of genes involved in invasion and metastasis in MCF10A breast cells. 1499 49
Tumor metastasis
is the major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with breast cancer. It is critical to identify metastasis enabling genes and understand how they are responsible for inducing specific aspects of the metastatic phenotype to allow for improved clinical detection and management. Protein kinase C epsilon (PKC epsilon), a member of a family of serine/threonine protein kinases, is a transforming oncogene that has been reported to be involved in cell invasion and motility. In this study, we investigated the role of PKC epsilon in breast cancer development and progression. High-density tissue microarray analysis showed that PKC epsilon protein was detected in 73.6% (106 of 144) of primary tumors from invasive ductal breast cancer patients. Increasing PKC epsilon staining intensity was associated with high histologic grade (P = 0.0206), positive Her2/neu receptor status (P = 0.0419), and negative estrogen (P = 0.0026) and progesterone receptor status (P = 0.0008). Kaplan-Meier analyses showed that PKC epsilon was significantly associated with poorer disease-free and overall survival (log-rank, P = 0.0478 and P = 0.0414, respectively). RNA interference of PKC epsilon in MDA-MB231 cells, an aggressive breast cancer cell line with elevated PKC epsilon levels, resulted in a cell phenotype that was significantly less proliferative, invasive, and motile than the parental or the control RNA interference transfectants. Moreover, in vivo tumor growth of small interfering RNA-PKC epsilon MDA-MB231 clones was retarded by a striking 87% (P < 0.05) and incidence of lung metastases was inhibited by 83% (P < 0.02). PKC epsilon-deficient clones were found to have lower
RhoC
GTPase protein levels and activation. Taken together, these results revealed that PKC epsilon plays a critical and causative role in promoting an aggressive metastatic breast cancer phenotype and as a target for anticancer therapy.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C epsilon is a predictive biomarker of aggressive breast cancer and a validated target for RNA interference anticancer therapy. 1616 14
It is projected that in 2005, approximately 220 900 men will be newly diagnosed with carcinoma of the prostate (CaP). Men who are diagnosed with locally advanced or
metastatic disease
undergo androgen ablation therapy and most will relapse and progress within 18 months. Metastasis to bone is the major clinical concern during CaP progression, as it is associated with intractable pain, bone fracture and paralysis resulting from spinal cord compression. Therefore, an understanding of the key mechanisms involved in CaP cell bone metastasis is vital to development of novel treatments. The Rho GTPases are molecular switches involved in cell survival, motility and invasion. Increased expression of
RhoC
GTPase is linked to enhanced metastatic potential in multiple cancers; however, the role of
RhoC
GTPase in CaP metastasis has not been addressed. In the current study, we demonstrate that
RhoC
GTPase is expressed and active in PC-3 CaP cells.
RhoC
inhibition, either pharmacologically with C3 exotransferase or molecularly through expression of a dominant-negative
RhoC
, promotes IGF-I stimulated random motility but decreases in vitro invasion and experimental
metastases
. Inhibition of
RhoC
activity results in drastic morphologic changes and alterations in the expression and distribution of focal adhesion-related proteins. These data suggest that
RhoC
inhibition leads to activation of other GTPases involved in nondirected motility and that expression of active
RhoC
is required for the invasive phenotype of PC-3 cells.
...
PMID:RhoC GTPase is required for PC-3 prostate cancer cell invasion but not motility. 1631 38
Phosphatase found in regenerating liver (PRL)-1, PRL-2, and PRL-3 [also known as PTP4A1, PTP4A2, and PTP4A3, respectively] constitute a unique family of putative protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) modified by farnesylation. PRL-3 is amplified and its message is up-regulated in colorectal carcinoma
metastases
. Its ectopic expression promotes invasive and metastatic properties, supporting a causal link between PRL-3 and late-stage cancer development. However, neither PRL phosphatase substrates nor their signaling pathways have been defined. To address possible mechanisms for the biological activity of PRL-3, we sought to identify its downstream targets, reasoning that regulators of motility and invasion, such as the Rho family of small GTPases, might be logical candidates. We found that levels of active RhoA and
RhoC
were increased 4- to 7-fold in SW480 colorectal carcinoma cells expressing exogenous PRL-1 and PRL-3, and that PRL-mediated motility and Matrigel invasion were blocked by pharmacologic inhibition of Rho kinase (ROCK), a key Rho effector. In contrast, the activity of Rac was reduced by PRL PTPs, whereas Cdc42 activity was unaffected. PRL-3 stimulated transcription driven by the serum response element in a Rho-dependent manner. We also confirmed that the ability of PRL PTPs to induce invasion and motility is dependent on farnesylation. Catalytic PRL-3 mutants (C104A or D72A) were impaired in PRL-3-induced invasion and Rho activation, indicating that these properties require phosphatase activity. We conclude that PRL PTPs stimulate Rho signaling pathways to promote motility and invasion. Characterization of PRL activity and regulatory pathways should enhance efforts to understand and interfere with PRL-mediated events in invasion and metastasis.
...
PMID:PRL tyrosine phosphatases regulate rho family GTPases to promote invasion and motility. 1654 Jun 66
The most frequent site of prostate cancer metastasis is the bone. Adhesion to bone-specific factors may facilitate the selective metastasis of prostate cancer to the skeleton. Therefore, we tested whether prostate cancer bone metastasis is mediated by binding to type I collagen, the most abundant bone protein. We observed that only bone metastatic prostate cancer cells bound collagen I, whereas cells that form only visceral
metastases
failed to bind collagen. To confirm the relationship between collagen adhesion and bone metastatic potential, a collagen-binding variant of human LNCaP prostate cancer cells was derived through serial passage on type I collagen (LNCaP(col)). Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis showed that LNCaP(col) cells express increased levels of the integrin collagen I receptor alpha(2)beta(1) compared with LNCaP cells. Antibodies to the alpha(2)beta(1) complex inhibited LNCaP(col) binding to collagen, confirming that integrins mediated the attachment. Correspondingly, LNCaP(col) cells displayed enhanced chemotactic migration toward collagen I compared with LNCaP cells, an activity that could be blocked with alpha(2)beta(1) antibodies. To directly test the role of alpha(2)beta(1)-dependent collagen binding in bone metastasis, LNCaP and LNCaP(col) cells were injected into the tibia of nude mice. After 9 weeks, 7 of 13 (53%) mice injected with LNCaP(col) developed bone tumors, whereas 0 of 8 mice injected with LNCaP cells had evidence of boney lesions. LNCaP(col) cells were found to express increased levels of the metastasis-promoting
RhoC
GTPase compared with parental LNCaP. We conclude that collagen I attachment mediated by alpha(2)beta(1) initiates motility programs through
RhoC
and suggest a mechanism for prostate cancer metastasis to the bone.
...
PMID:Type I collagen receptor (alpha 2 beta 1) signaling promotes the growth of human prostate cancer cells within the bone. 1695 Nov 79
Over 70% of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) present with locoregionally advanced stage III and IV disease. In spite of aggressive therapy, locoregional disease recurs in 60% and
metastatic disease
develops in 15% to 25% of patients causing a major decline in quality and length of life. Therefore, there is a need to identify and understand genes that are responsible for inducing an aggressive HNSCC phenotype. Evidence has shown that protein kinase C (PKC) epsilon is a transforming oncogene and may play a role in HNSCC progression. In this study, we determine the downstream signaling pathway mediated by PKC epsilon to promote an aggressive HNSCC phenotype. RNA interference knockdown of PKC epsilon in UMSCC11A and UMSCC36, two highly invasive and motile HNSCC cell lines with elevated endogenous PKC epsilon levels, resulted in cells that were significantly less invasive and motile than the small interfering RNA-scrambled control transfectants; 51 +/- 5% (P < 0.006) and 49 +/- 3% (P < 0.010) inhibition in invasion and 69 +/- 1% (P < 0.0005) and 66 +/- 3% (P < 0.0001) inhibition in motility, respectively. PKC epsilon-deficient UMSCC11A clones had reduced levels of active and serine-phosphorylated RhoA and
RhoC
. Moreover, constitutive active RhoA completely rescued the invasion and motility defect, whereas constitutive active
RhoC
completely rescued the invasion and partially rescued the motility defect of PKC epsilon-deficient UMSCC11A clones. These results indicate that RhoA and
RhoC
are downstream of PKC epsilon and critical for PKC epsilon-mediated cell invasion and motility. Our study shows, for the first time, that PKC epsilon is involved in a coordinated regulation of RhoA and
RhoC
activation, possibly through direct post-translational phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Targeted disruption of protein kinase C epsilon reduces cell invasion and motility through inactivation of RhoA and RhoC GTPases in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. 1701 91
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