An essential role for decorin in bladder cancer invasiveness

Mohamed El Behi(Inserm), Sophie Krumeich(Inserm), Catalina Lodillinsky(Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas), Aurélie Kamoun(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Lorenzo Tibaldi(Inserm), Gaël Sugano(Inserm), Aurélien de Reyniès(La Ligue Contre le Cancer), Elodie Chapeaublanc(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Agnès Laplanche(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Thierry Lebrét(Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines), Yves Allory(Inserm), François Radvanyi(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Olivier Lantz(Inserm), Ana María Eiján(Universidad de Buenos Aires), Isabelle Bernard‐Pierrot(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Clotilde Théry(Inserm)
EMBO Molecular Medicine
October 20, 2013
Cited by 50Open Access
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Abstract

Muscle-invasive forms of urothelial carcinomas are responsible for most mortality in bladder cancer. Finding new treatments for invasive bladder tumours requires adequate animal models to decipher the mechanisms of progression, in particular the way tumours interact with their microenvironment. Herein, using the murine bladder tumour cell line MB49 and its more aggressive variant MB49-I, we demonstrate that the adaptive immune system efficiently limits progression of MB49, whereas MB49-I has lost tumour antigens and is insensitive to adaptive immune responses. Furthermore, we unravel a parallel mechanism developed by MB49-I to subvert its environment: de novo secretion of the proteoglycan decorin. We show that decorin overexpression in the MB49/MB49-I model is required for efficient progression, by promoting angiogenesis and tumour cell invasiveness. Finally, we show that these results are relevant to muscle-invasive human bladder carcinomas, which overexpress decorin together with angiogenesis- and adhesion/migration-related genes, and that decorin overexpression in the human bladder carcinoma cell line TCCSUP is required for efficient invasiveness in vitro. We thus propose decorin as a new therapeutic target for these aggressive tumours.


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