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Johns Hopkins Medicine
First step of metastasis halted in mice with breast cancer
Cell biologists at Johns Hopkins have identified a unique class of breast cancer cells that lead the process of invasion into surrounding tissues. Because invasion is the first step in the deadly process of cancer metastasis, the researchers say they may have found a weak link in cancer's armor and a possible new target for therapy. A summary of their results will be published online in the journal Cell on Dec. 12.
"Metastasis is what most threatens breast cancer patients, and we have found a way to stop the first part of the process in mice," says Andrew Ewald, Ph.D., assistant professor of cell biology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
Before metastasis occurs, single cells on the edge of a tumor, termed leader cells, form protrusions into the surrounding tissue, like someone dipping a toe in to test the water before deciding to venture farther, Ewald says. If the conditions are right, the leader cells act as guides, with many tumor cells following behind, as they escape the confines of the tumor into the healthy tissue beyond. Full metastasis occurs when the cells succeed in migrating to a new location — the lungs, for example — and set up shop, creating a new tumor.
Beginning with the idea that some cells in the tumor might be more invasive than others, Ewald's team grew mouse tumors in the laboratory in special 3-D gels that mimic the environment that surrounds breast tumors in human patients. Kevin Cheung, M.D., a medical oncology fellow in the Ewald lab, observed that the cancer cells infiltrated the gels in groups, with a few cells out in front and the rest following behind.
Looking for a molecular cause for the apparent "leadership" seen in the initiating cells, Cheung searched for proteins that were uniquely present in the leader cells. They identified one protein, cytokeratin 14, or K14, that was present in almost all leader cells but was very rare in the noninvasive parts of the tumor. When the team looked at tumors from mice that had other types of breast cancer — some more prone to invasion and others less prone — all had leader cells containing K14. The more invasive a tumor was, the more cells with K14 it had.
The team then grew breast tumors from 10 breast cancer patients in 3-D gels and found that the leader cells in these human tumors also contained K14. "Our research shows that the most invasive cells in breast tumors express K14 across all types of breast cancer," says Cheung. "Now we need to learn how to eliminate these leader cells from breast tumors in patients."
K14 is a protein that helps form the internal "skeleton" of many cell types, giving them structure and helping them to move. Although its presence in leader cells made its involvement in the invasion process seem likely, the investigators conducted further experiments to determine whether it was essential to the process or merely coincidental to it.
The researchers removed breast tumors from mice with breast cancer and divided them into an experimental group and a control group. Each group of tumors was exposed to viruses that had been reprogrammed to carry pieces of genetic material into the cells. The experimental group received genetic material designed to prevent the production of K14; the control group got genetic material that didn't affect the cells. The two groups of tumors were then transplanted into healthy mice, with experimental tumors on one side and control tumors on the other side of the same mouse.
After letting the tumors grow for some time, the team removed and examined them. As expected, in the control group, leader cells were present, contained K14 and were leading vigorous invasions into normal tissue. In the experimental tumors, whose cells had no K14, the tumor borders were smooth, with essentially no invasions occurring.
"We're still several years away from being able to use these insights to help patients with breast cancer, but we now know which tumor cells are the most dangerous, and we know some of the proteins they rely on to do their dirty work," says Ewald. "Just a few leader cells are sufficient to start the process of metastasis, and they require K14 to lead the invasion."
He also notes that K14 is present in cells within many other organs, so K14 may play a similar role in other types of cancer.
INFORMATION:
Other authors of the report include Edward Gabrielson of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Zena Werb of the University of California, San Francisco.
This work was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute (R01 CA056721, U01 CA155758, P50 CA103175 and P50 CA88843), the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (U01 ES019458), the Department of Defense CDMRP Breast Cancer Program (W81XWH-12-1-0018), the Avon Foundation, the Mary Kay Foundation, the Safeway Foundation, the Cindy Rosencrans Fund for Triple Negative Breast Cancer Research and the American Cancer Society.
On the Web:
Link to article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2013.11.029
Ewald Lab: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/cellbio/dept/EwaldProfile.html
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Media Relations and Public Affairs
Media Contacts:
Catherine Kolf; 443-287-2251; ckolf@jhmi.edu
Vanessa McMains; 410-502-9410; vmcmain1@jhmi.edu
First step of metastasis halted in mice with breast cancer
2013-12-12
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