Loss of Retinal Cadherin Facilitates Mammary Tumor Progression and Metastasis

Georgia Agiostratidou(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Maomi Li(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Kimita Suyama(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Inés Badano(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Rinat Keren(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Su Wol Chung(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Amy Anzovino(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), James Hulit(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Bin‐Zhi Qian(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Boumediene Bouzahzah(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Eliseo A. Eugenín(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Olivier Loudig(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Greg R. Phillips(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Joseph Locker(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Rachel B. Hazan(Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Cancer Research
June 2, 2009
Cited by 54Open Access
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Abstract

The mammary epithelium is thought to be stabilized by cell-cell adhesion mediated mainly by E-cadherin (E-cad). Here, we show that another cadherin, retinal cadherin (R-cad), is critical for maintenance of the epithelial phenotype. R-cad is expressed in nontransformed mammary epithelium but absent from tumorigenic cell lines. In vivo, R-cad was prominently expressed in the epithelium of both ducts and lobules. In human breast cancer, R-cad was down-regulated with tumor progression, with high expression in ductal carcinoma in situ and reduced expression in invasive duct carcinomas. By comparison, E-cad expression persisted in invasive breast tumors and cell lines where R-cad was lost. Consistent with these findings, R-cad knockdown in normal mammary epithelium stimulated invasiveness and disrupted formation of acini despite continued E-cad expression. Conversely, R-cad overexpression in aggressive cell lines induced glandular morphogenesis and inhibited invasiveness, tumor formation, and lung colonization. R-cad also suppressed the matrix metalloproteinase 1 (MMP1), MMP2, and cyclooxygenase 2 gene expression associated with pulmonary metastasis. The data suggest that R-cad is an adhesion molecule of the mammary epithelium, which acts as a critical regulator of the normal phenotype. As a result, R-cad loss contributes to epithelial suppression and metastatic progression.


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