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Hypoxia Induces a HIF-1-Dependent Transition from Collective-to-Amoeboid Dissemination in Epithelial Cancer Cells
- Source :
- Current Biology, 27, 3, pp. 392-400, Current Biology, 27, 392-400
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Contains fulltext : 170562.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) Cancer metastases arise from a multi-step process that requires metastasizing tumor cells to adapt to signaling input from varying tissue environments [1]. As an early metastatic event, cancer cell dissemination occurs through different migration programs, including multicellular, collective, and single-cell mesenchymal or amoeboid migration [2-4]. Migration modes can interconvert based on changes in cell adhesion, cytoskeletal mechanotransduction [5], and/or proteolysis [6], most likely under the control of transcriptional programs such as the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) [7, 8]. However, how plasticity of tumor cell migration and EMT is spatiotemporally controlled and connected upon challenge by the tumor microenvironment remains unclear. Using 3D cultures of collectively invading breast and head and neck cancer spheroids, here we identify hypoxia, a hallmark of solid tumors [9], as an inducer of the collective-to-amoeboid transition (CAT), promoting the dissemination of amoeboid-moving single cells from collective invasion strands. Hypoxia-induced amoeboid detachment was driven by hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1), followed the downregulation of E-cadherin, and produced heterogeneous cell subsets whose phenotype and migration were dependent ( approximately 30%) or independent ( approximately 70%) of Twist-mediated EMT. EMT-like and EMT-independent amoeboid cell subsets showed stable amoeboid movement over hours as well as leukocyte-like traits, including rounded morphology, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-independent migration, and nuclear deformation. Cancer cells undergoing pharmacological stabilization of HIFs retained their constitutive ability for early metastatic seeding in an experimental model of lung metastasis, indicating that hypoxia-induced CAT enhances cell release rather than early organ colonization. Induced by metabolic challenge, amoeboid movement may thus constitute a common endpoint of both EMT-dependent and EMT-independent cancer dissemination programs. 9 p.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition
Cancer development and immune defence Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 2]
Cell
10050 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Breast Neoplasms
610 Medicine & health
1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Biology
Mechanotransduction, Cellular
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Downregulation and upregulation
Cell Movement
1300 General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cell Line, Tumor
10049 Institute of Pathology and Molecular Pathology
medicine
Cell Adhesion
Humans
Epithelial–mesenchymal transition
Mechanotransduction
Neoplasm Metastasis
Sensory disorders Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 12]
Tumor microenvironment
Amoeboid movement
Mesenchymal stem cell
Twist-Related Protein 1
Nuclear Proteins
ta3122
ta3125
Cell biology
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Head and Neck Neoplasms
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Immunology
Cancer cell
Tumor Hypoxia
Female
Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 09609822
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Current Biology, 27, 3, pp. 392-400, Current Biology, 27, 392-400
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....dcf6f2692541613c3d5f840ec8e36182