EMT Inducers Catalyze Malignant Transformation of Mammary Epithelial Cells and Drive Tumorigenesis towards Claudin-Low Tumors in Transgenic Mice

Anne‐Pierre Morel(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), George Hinkal(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Clémence Thomas(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Frédérique Fauvet(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Stéphanie Courtois-Cox(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Anne Wierinckx(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Mojgan Devouassoux‐Shisheboran(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Isabelle Treilleux(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Agnès Tissier(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Baptiste Gras(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Julie Pourchet(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Isabelle Puisieux(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Gareth J. Browne(University of Leicester), Douglas B. Spicer(Maine Medical Center Research Institute), Joël Lachuer(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Stéphane Ansieau(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Alain Puisieux(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1)
PLoS Genetics
May 24, 2012
Cited by 197Open Access
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Abstract

The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is an embryonic transdifferentiation process consisting of conversion of polarized epithelial cells to motile mesenchymal ones. EMT-inducing transcription factors are aberrantly expressed in multiple tumor types and are known to favor the metastatic dissemination process. Supporting oncogenic activity within primary lesions, the TWIST and ZEB proteins can prevent cells from undergoing oncogene-induced senescence and apoptosis by abolishing both p53- and RB-dependent pathways. Here we show that they also downregulate PP2A phosphatase activity and efficiently cooperate with an oncogenic version of H-RAS in malignant transformation of human mammary epithelial cells. Thus, by down-regulating crucial tumor suppressor functions, EMT inducers make cells particularly prone to malignant conversion. Importantly, by analyzing transformed cells generated in vitro and by characterizing novel transgenic mouse models, we further demonstrate that cooperation between an EMT inducer and an active form of RAS is sufficient to trigger transformation of mammary epithelial cells into malignant cells exhibiting all the characteristic features of claudin-low tumors, including low expression of tight and adherens junction genes, EMT traits, and stem cell-like characteristics. Claudin-low tumors are believed to be the most primitive breast malignancies, having arisen through transformation of an early epithelial precursor with inherent stemness properties and metaplastic features. Challenging this prevailing view, we propose that these aggressive tumors arise from cells committed to luminal differentiation, through a process driven by EMT inducers and combining malignant transformation and transdifferentiation.


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