Identification of p130Cas/ErbB2-dependent invasive signatures in transformed mammary epithelial cells

Alessandra Pincini(University of Turin), Giusy Tornillo(University of Turin), Francesca Orso(University of Turin), Marianna Sciortino(University of Turin), Brigitte Bisarò(University of Turin), Maria del Pilar Camacho Leal(University of Turin), Antonio Lembo(University of Turin), Maria Felice Brizzi(5T Torino (Italy)), Emilia Turco(University of Turin), Cristiano De Pittà(University of Padua), Paolo Provero(University of Turin), Enzo Médico(Candiolo Cancer Institute), Paola Defilippi(University of Turin), Daniela Taverna(University of Turin), Sara Cabodi(University of Turin)
Cell Cycle
August 1, 2013
Cited by 22Open Access
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Abstract

Understanding transcriptional changes during cancer progression is of crucial importance to develop new and more efficacious diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. It is well known that ErbB2 is overexpressed in about 25% of human invasive breast cancers. We have previously demonstrated that p130Cas overexpression synergizes with ErbB2 in mammary cell transformation and promotes ErbB2-dependent invasion in three-dimensional (3D) cultures of human mammary epithelial cells. Here, by comparing coding and non-coding gene expression profiles, we define the invasive signatures associated with concomitant p130Cas overexpression and ErbB2 activation in 3D cultures of mammary epithelial cells. Specifically, we have found that genes involved in amino acids synthesis (CBS, PHGDH), cell motility, migration (ITPKA, PRDM1), and angiogenesis (HEY1) are upregulated, while genes involved in inflammatory response (SAA1, S100A7) are downregulated. In parallel, we have shown that the expression of specific miRNAs is altered. Among these, miR-200b, miR-222, miR-221, miR-R210, and miR-424 are upregulated, while miR-27a, miR-27b, and miR-23b are downregulated. Overall, this study presents, for the first time, the gene expression changes underlying the invasive behavior following p130Cas overexpression in an ErbB2 transformed mammary cell model.


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