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HGF upregulation contributes to angiogenesis in mice with keratinocyte-specific Smad2 deletion
Kristina E. Hoot, … , Qinghong Zhang, Xiao-Jing Wang
Kristina E. Hoot, … , Qinghong Zhang, Xiao-Jing Wang
Published September 13, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(10):3606-3616. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI43304.
View: Text | PDF | Corrigendum
Research Article Oncology

HGF upregulation contributes to angiogenesis in mice with keratinocyte-specific Smad2 deletion

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Abstract

TGF-β signaling can promote tumor formation and development or suppress it, depending on the cellular context and tumor stage. A potential target of this dual effect of TGF-β is HGF, as TGF-β can inhibit or promote its expression, although the mechanisms underlying this are largely unknown. In the present study, we found that mice with keratinocyte-specific deletion of the TGF-β signaling mediator Smad2 (referred to herein as K5.Smad2–/– mice), which have increased susceptibility to squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs), exhibited angiogenesis associated with epithelial overexpression of HGF and endothelial activation of the HGF receptor c-Met. Application of a c-Met inhibitor abrogated angiogenesis, suggesting that HGF overexpression plays a major role in angiogenesis associated with epithelial Smad2 loss. On the Hgf promoter, Smad2 was mainly associated with transcriptional corepressors, whereas Smad4 was mainly associated with the transcriptional coactivator CREB-binding protein (CBP/p300). Smad2 loss caused increased binding of Smad4 and CBP/p300 to the Hgf promoter. Consistent with this, knocking down Smad2 in human keratinocytes caused increased levels of HGF, which were abrogated by concomitant knockdown of Smad3 and Smad4. Importantly, the incidence of HGF-positive human SCC was high in cases with Smad2 loss and lower when Smad4 was also lost. We therefore conclude that Smad2 loss causes HGF upregulation via loss of Smad2-mediated transcriptional repression and enhanced Smad3/4-mediated transactivation. Since Smad2 is often downregulated in human SCCs, our data suggest a therapeutic strategy of blocking HGF/c-Met activation for Smad2-deficient SCCs.

Authors

Kristina E. Hoot, Masako Oka, Gangwen Han, Erwin Bottinger, Qinghong Zhang, Xiao-Jing Wang

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Figure 4

c-Met inhibition abrogates angiogenesis associated with epithelial Smad2 loss.

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c-Met inhibition abrogates angiogenesis associated with epithelial Smad2...
(A) IF staining of CD31 (green) shows increased angiogenesis in K5.Smad2–/– tongue mucosa, which was abrogated by a c-Met inhibitor PHA66572. K14 (red) was used for counterstain. (B) IF staining shows that PHA66572 did not affect Smad2 activation, as evidenced by staining of p-Smad2 (green). Note that p-Smad2 was specifically ablated in tongue epithelial cells but not in K5.Smad2–/– stroma. K14 (red) was used for counterstain. (C) Double IF staining of p–c-Met (green) and CD31 (red) shows that the vessels in K5.Smad2–/– tongue had increased p–c-Met staining (yellow or orange), which was abrogated by PHA66572 treatment. Bright green staining surrounding the vessels represents autofluorescence of the muscles in the tongue. Scale bar: 100 μm.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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