Podocalyxin is an anti-adhesive transmembrane sialomucin that has been implicated in the development of more aggressive forms of breast and prostate cancer. The mechanism through which podocalyxin increases cancer aggressiveness remains poorly understood but may involve the interaction of podocalyxin with ezrin, an established mediator of metastasis. Here, we show that overexpression of podocalyxin in MCF7 breast cancer and PC3 prostate cancer cell lines increased their in vitro invasive and migratory potential and led to increased expression of matrix metalloproteases 1 and 9 (MMP1 and MMP9). Podocalyxin expression also led to an increase in mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) activity. To determine the role of ezrin in these podocalyxin-dependent phenotypic events, we first confirmed that podocalyxin formed a complex with ezrin in MCF7 and PC3 cells. Furthermore, expression of podocalyxin was associated with a changed ezrin subcellular localization and increased ezrin phosphorylation. Transient knockdown of ezrin protein abrogated MAPK and PI3K signaling as well as MMP expression and invasiveness in cancer cells overexpressing podocalyxin. These findings suggest that podocalyxin leads to increased in vitro migration and invasion, increased MMP expression, and increased activation of MAPK and PI3K activity in MCF7 and PC3 cells through its ability to form a complex with ezrin. [Cancer Res 2007;67(13):6183-91]
Mutated in colorectal cancer (MCC ) was originally identified as a candidate gene for familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) but further study identified adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) as responsible for FAP and the physiologic/pathologic roles of MCC remained poorly understood. Recently, MCC promoter methylation was discovered as a frequent early event in a distinct subset of precursor lesions and colorectal cancer (CRC) associated with the serrated CRC pathway. Here we provide the first evidence of the biological significance of MCC loss in CRC and the molecular pathways involved. We show MCC expression is dramatically decreased in many CRC cell lines and the distinct subset of sporadic CRC characterized by the CpG island methylator phenotype and BRAF V600E mutation due to promoter methylation as reported previously. Importantly, we find MCC interacts with b-catenin and that reexpression of MCC in CRC cells specifically inhibits Wnt signaling, b-catenin/T-cell factor/lymphoid-enhancer factor-dependent transcription and cellular proliferation even in the presence of oncogenic mutant APC. We also show that MCC is localized in the nucleus and identify two functional nuclear localization signals. Taken together, MCC is a nuclear, b-catenininteracting protein that can act as a potential tumor suppressor in the serrated CRC pathway by inhibiting Wnt/b-catenin signal transduction.
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