Epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a key event that is involved in the invasion and dissemination of cancer cells. Although typically considered as having tumour-suppressive properties, transforming growth factor (TGF)-β signalling is altered during cancer and has been associated with the invasion of cancer cells and metastasis. In this study, we report a previously unknown role for the cytoplasmic promyelocytic leukaemia (cPML) tumour suppressor in TGF-β signalling-induced regulation of prostate cancer-associated EMT and invasion. We demonstrate that cPML promotes a mesenchymal phenotype and increases the invasiveness of prostate cancer cells. This event is associated with activation of TGF-β canonical signalling pathway through the induction of Sma and Mad related family 2 and 3 (SMAD2 and SMAD3) phosphorylation. Furthermore, the cytoplasmic localization of promyelocytic leukaemia (PML) is mediated by its nuclear export in a chromosomal maintenance 1 (CRM1)-dependent manner. This was clinically tested in prostate cancer tissue and shown that cytoplasmic PML and CRM1 co-expression correlates with reduced disease-specific survival. In summary, we provide evidence of dysfunctional TGF-β signalling occurring at an early stage in prostate cancer. We show that this disease pathway is mediated by cPML and CRM1 and results in a more aggressive cancer cell phenotype. We propose that the targeting of this pathway could be therapeutically exploited for clinical benefit.
The prognosis of advanced metastatic melanoma (American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stage IV) remains dismal with a 5-year survival rate of 6-18%. In the present study, an integrated MALDI mass spectrometric approach combined with artificial neural networks (ANNs) analysis and modeling has been used for the identification of biomarker ions in serum from stage IV melanoma patients allowing the discrimination of metastatic disease from healthy status with high specificities of 92% for protein ions and 100% for peptide biomarkers. Our ANNs model also correctly classified 98% of a blind validation set of AJCC stage I melanoma samples as nonstage IV samples, emphasizing the power of the newly defined biomarkers to identify patients with late-stage metastatic melanoma. Sequence analysis identified peptides derived from metastasis-associated proteins; alpha 1-acid glycoprotein precursor-1/2 (AAG-1/2) and complement C3 component precursor-1 (CCCP-1). Furthermore, quantitation of serum AAG by an immunoassay showed a significant (p<0.001) increase in AAG serum concentration in stage IV patients in comparison with healthy volunteers; moreover; the quantity of AAG plotted against MALDI-MS peak intensity classified the groups into two distinct clusters. Ongoing studies of other disease stages will provide evidence whether our strategy is sufficiently robust to give rise to stage-specific protein/peptide signatures in melanoma.
Background: ABCB5ϩ MMIC are a population of chemoresistant cancer stem cell-like cells responsible for melanoma initiation, growth, and progression. Results: HAGE promotes ABCB5ϩ MMIC-dependent tumorigenesis by enhancing RAS protein expression. Conclusion: ABCB5ϩ MMIC require the presence of HAGE for their tumorigenic activity. Significance: HAGE is expressed only by tumor cells. Hence, targeting HAGE helicase may have broad therapeutic applications.
The identification of antigens that distinguish normal cells from cancer cells is an important challenge in the field of tumour immunology and immunotherapy. The immunoscreening of cDNA expression libraries constructed from human tumour tissues with antibodies in sera from cancer patents (SEREX: serological identification of antigens by recombinant expression cloning) provides a powerful approach to identify immunogenic tumour antigens. To date, over 2,000 tumour antigens have been identified from a variety of malignancies using SEREX. These antigens can be classified into several categories, of which the cancer/testis (CT) antigens appear to be the most attractive candidates for vaccine development. The SEREX-defined tumour antigens facilitate the identification of epitopes (antigenic peptides) recognised by antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and provide a basis for peptide vaccine and gene therapy in a wide variety of human cancers. Moreover, some of these antigens seem to play a functional role in the pathogenesis of cancer.
Cell biologists generally consider that microtubules and actin play complementary roles in long-and short-distance transport in animal cells. On the contrary, using melanosomes of melanocytes as a model, we recently discovered that the motor protein myosin-Va works with dynamic actin tracks to drive long-range organelle dispersion in opposition to microtubules. This suggests that in animals, as in yeast and plants, myosin/actin can drive longrange transport. Here, we show that the SPIRE-type actin nucleators (predominantly SPIRE1) are Rab27a effectors that cooperate with formin-1 to generate actin tracks required for myosin-Va-dependent transport in melanocytes. Thus, in addition to melanophilin/myosin-Va, Rab27a can recruit SPIREs to melanosomes, thereby integrating motor and track assembly activity at the organelle membrane. Based on this, we suggest a model in which organelles and force generators (motors and track assemblers) are linked, forming an organelle-based, cell-wide network that allows their collective activity to rapidly disperse the population of organelles long-distance throughout the cytoplasm.
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