4.8 Article

ETV4 promotes metastasis in response to activation of PI3-kinase and Ras signaling in a mouse model of advanced prostate cancer

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1303558110

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [U01 CA084294, P01 CA154293, U54 CA121852]
  2. Silico Research Centre of Excellence National Cancer Institute Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG) Program Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) [29XS192]
  3. V Foundation for Cancer Research
  4. Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship [PIOF-GA-2009-253290]
  5. Catalan Institute of Oncology-Bellvitge Institute for Biomedical Research
  6. [P50-CA092629]
  7. [P30-CA08748]

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Combinatorial activation of PI3-kinase and RAS signaling occurs frequently in advanced prostate cancer and is associated with adverse patient outcome. We now report that the oncogenic Ets variant 4 (Etv4) promotes prostate cancer metastasis in response to coactivation of PI3-kinase and Ras signaling pathways in a genetically engineered mouse model of highly penetrant, metastatic prostate cancer. Using an inducible Cre driver to simultaneously inactivate Pten while activating oncogenic Kras and a fluorescent reporter allele in the prostate epithelium, we performed lineage tracing in vivo to define the temporal and spatial occurrence of prostate tumors, disseminated tumor cells, and metastases. These analyses revealed that though disseminated tumors cells arise early following the initial occurrence of prostate tumors, there is a significant temporal lag in metastasis, which is temporally coincident with the up-regulation of Etv4 expression in primary tumors. Functional studies showed that knockdown of Etv4 in a metastatic cell line derived from the mouse model abrogates the metastatic phenotype but does not affect tumor growth. Notably, expression and activation of ETV4, but not other oncogenic ETS genes, is correlated with activation of both PI3-kinase and Ras signaling in human prostate tumors and metastases. Our findings indicate that ETV4 promotes metastasis in prostate tumors that have activation of PI3-kinase and Ras signaling, and therefore, ETV4 represents a potential target of therapeutic intervention for metastatic prostate cancer.

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