1. Strong fascin expression promotes metastasis independent of its F-actin bundling activity
- Author
-
Leticia Oliveira-Ferrer, Anja Konietzny, Jasmin Wellbrock, Tobias Lange, Lisa S Heinz, Johanna Schiewek, Sabine Windhorst, Marcus M. Nalaskowski, Marina Mikhaylova, Stefanie Muhs, Yuan-Na Lin, Harriet Wikman, and Saskia Grüb
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Chemistry ,Mutant ,Wild type ,Nod ,macromolecular substances ,fascin ,medicine.disease ,Metastasis ,Cell biology ,cytoskeletal dynamics ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,In vivo ,Microtubule ,biology.protein ,medicine ,metastasis ,actin ,Actin ,Fascin ,Research Paper ,microtubule - Abstract
High expression of the actin bundling protein Fascin increases the malignancy of tumor cells. Here we show that fascin expression is up-regulated in more malignant sub-cell lines of MDA-MB-231 cells as compared to parental cells. Since also parental MDA-MB-231 cells exhibit high fascin levels, increased fascin expression was termed as "hyperexpression". To examine the effect of fascin hyperexpression, fascin was hyperexpressed in parental MDA-MB-231 cells and metastasis was analyzed in NOD scid gamma (NSG) mice. In addition, the effect of fascin mutants with inactive or constitutively active actin bundling activity was examined. Unexpectedly, we found that hyperexpression of both, wildtype (wt) and mutant fascin strongly increased metastasis in vivo, showing that the effect of fascin hyperexpression did not depend on its actin bundling activity. Cellular assays revealed that hyperexpression of wt and mutant fascin increased adhesion of MDA-MB-231 cells while transmigration and proliferation were not affected. Since it has been shown that fascin controls adhesion by directly interacting with microtubules (MTs), we analyzed if fascin hyperexpression affects MT dynamics. We found that at high concentrations fascin significantly increased MT dynamics in cells and in cell-free approaches. In summary our data show that strong expression of fascin in breast cancer cells increases metastasis independent of its actin bundling activity. Thus, it seems that the mechanism of fascin-stimulated metastasis depends on its concentration.
- Published
- 2017