[HTML][HTML] Regulation of epithelial plasticity by miR-424 and miR-200 in a new prostate cancer metastasis model

J Banyard, I Chung, AM Wilson, G Vetter… - Scientific reports, 2013 - nature.com
J Banyard, I Chung, AM Wilson, G Vetter, A Le Béchec, DR Bielenberg, BR Zetter
Scientific reports, 2013nature.com
Using an in vivo cycling strategy, we selected metastatic cancer cells from the lymph nodes
(LN) of mice bearing orthotopic DU145 human prostate tumors. Repeated rounds of
metastatic selection (LN1–LN4) progressively increased the epithelial phenotype, resulting
in a new model of tumor cell mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET). DU145-LN4 showed
increased cell-cell adhesions, higher expression of multiple epithelial markers, such as E-
cadherin, EpCAM and cytokeratin 18 and reduced expression of mesenchymal markers …
Abstract
Using an in vivo cycling strategy, we selected metastatic cancer cells from the lymph nodes (LN) of mice bearing orthotopic DU145 human prostate tumors. Repeated rounds of metastatic selection (LN1–LN4) progressively increased the epithelial phenotype, resulting in a new model of tumor cell mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET). DU145-LN4 showed increased cell-cell adhesions, higher expression of multiple epithelial markers, such as E-cadherin, EpCAM and cytokeratin 18 and reduced expression of mesenchymal markers such as vimentin. The MET in DU145-LN4 cells was accompanied by increased expression of the miR-200 family and antimiRs to miR-200c and miR-141 induced an EMT. MET also correlated with the loss of miR-424. Ectopic transient and stable miR-424 expression induced EMT, with reduced epithelial marker expression and increased cell scattering. Our model provides evidence for spontaneous MET in vivo. We show that this cellular plasticity can be mediated through the combined action of miR-424 and the miR-200 family.
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