Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8452006 | Experimental Cell Research | 2017 | 41 Pages |
Abstract
It was previously demonstrated that differentiation of some established breast epithelial cell lines requires confluence and stimulation with hydrocortisone, insulin and prolactin inducers. We and others previously demonstrated that E-cadherin engagement, which is favored under conditions of confluence, increases the levels and activity of the Rac small GTPase. To investigate the functional relationship between the transforming ability of Rac and its role as an integral component of the differentiative E-cadherin signaling pathway, we introduced a mutationally activated form of Rac, RacV12, into the mouse breast epithelium-derived cell line, HC11. Our results demonstrate that the strength of the Rac signal is key for the outcome of the differentiation process; cRac1 is critically required for differentiation, and at low levels, mutationally activated RacV12 is able to increase differentiation, presumably reinforcing the E-cadherin/Rac differentiative signal. However, high RacV12 expression blocked differentiation concomitant with E-cadherin downregulation, while inducing neoplastic transformation. Therefore, the intensity of the Rac signal is a central determinant in the balance between cell proliferation vs differentiation, two fundamentally opposed processes, a finding which could also have important therapeutic implications.
Keywords
GFPPAKIL6ECLRPMIshRNAGEFGTPRACSH2WAPEGFSTAT3E-cadherinGTPase Activating ProteinSTATImmunofluorescenceinterleukin-6enhanced chemiluminescenceDifferentiationGDPMammary epithelial cellsGAPepidermal growth factorguanine nucleotide exchange factorSignal transducer and activator of transcriptionHIPRoswell Park Memorial Institute mediumWhey acidic proteingreen fluorescent proteinepithelial cadherinp21-activated kinaseCRIBguanosine 5′-triphosphateguanosine 5′-diphosphate
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cancer Research
Authors
Maximilian Niit, Rozanne Arulanandam, Jamaica Cass, Mulu Geletu, Victoria Hoskin, Graham Côté, Patrick Gunning, Bruce Elliott, Leda Raptis,