Inhibition of Metastatic Outgrowth from Single Dormant Tumor Cells by Targeting the Cytoskeleton

Dalit Barkan(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Hynda K. Kleinman(National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research), Justin L. Simmons(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Holly Asmussen(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Anil K. Kamaraju(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Mark J. Hoenorhoff(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Zi-yao Liu(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Sylvain V. Costes(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Edward H. Cho(National Cancer Institute), Stephen Lockett(National Cancer Institute), Chand Khanna(National Cancer Institute), Ann F. Chambers, Jeffrey E. Green(Cancer Institute (WIA))
Cancer Research
August 1, 2008
Cited by 426Open Access
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Abstract

Metastatic breast cancer may emerge from latent tumor cells that remain dormant at disseminated sites for many years. Identifying mechanisms regulating the switch from dormancy to proliferative metastatic growth has been elusive due to the lack of experimental models of tumor cell dormancy. We characterized the in vitro growth characteristics of cells that exhibit either dormant (D2.0R, MCF-7, and K7M2AS1.46) or proliferative (D2A1, MDA-MB-231, and K7M2) metastatic behavior in vivo. Although these cells proliferate readily in two-dimensional culture, we show that when grown in three-dimensional matrix, distinct growth properties of the cells were revealed that correlate to their dormant or proliferative behavior at metastatic sites in vivo. In three-dimensional culture, cells with dormant behavior in vivo remained cell cycle arrested with elevated nuclear expression of p16 and p27. The transition from quiescence to proliferation of D2A1 cells was dependent on fibronectin production and signaling through integrin beta1, leading to cytoskeletal reorganization with filamentous actin (F-actin) stress fiber formation. We show that phosphorylation of myosin light chain (MLC) by MLC kinase (MLCK) through integrin beta1 is required for actin stress fiber formation and proliferative growth. Inhibition of integrin beta1 or MLCK prevents transition from a quiescent to proliferative state in vitro. Inhibition of MLCK significantly reduces metastatic outgrowth in vivo. These studies show that the switch from dormancy to metastatic growth may be regulated, in part, through epigenetic signaling from the microenvironment, leading to changes in the cytoskeletal architecture of dormant cells. Targeting this process may provide therapeutic strategies for inhibition of the dormant-to-proliferative metastatic switch.


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