4.8 Article

Deregulation of CRAD-controlled cytoskeleton initiates mucinous colorectal cancer via β-catenin

Journal

NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 11, Pages 1303-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41556-018-0215-z

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Funding

  1. Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas [RP140563]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA193297-01, 5R01 GM107079, R01 GM126048]
  3. Department of Defense Peer Reviewed Cancer Research Program [CA140572]
  4. Duncan Family Institute for Cancer Prevention and Risk Assessment Grant [IRG-08-061-01]
  5. Center for Stem Cell and Developmental Biology Transformative Grant (MD Anderson Cancer Center)
  6. Institutional Research Grant (MD Anderson Cancer Center)
  7. New Faculty Award (MD Anderson Cancer Center Support Grant)
  8. Metastasis Research Center Grant (MD Anderson)
  9. Uterine SPORE Career Enhancement Program (MD Anderson)
  10. MD Anderson Cancer Center Support Grant [CA016672]

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Epithelial integrity is maintained by the cytoskeleton and through cell adhesion. However, it is not yet known how a deregulated cytoskeleton is associated with cancer. We identified cancer-related regulator of actin dynamics (CRAD) as frequently mutated or transcriptionally downregulated in colorectal cancer. We found that CRAD stabilizes the cadherin-catenin-actin complex via capping protein inhibition. The loss of CRAD inhibits F-actin polymerization and subsequently disrupts the cadherin-catenin-actin complex, which leads to beta-catenin release and Wnt signalling hyperactivation. In mice, CRAD knockout induces epithelial cell integrity loss and Wnt signalling activation, resulting in the development of intestinal mucinous adenoma. With APC mutation, CRAD knockout initiates and accelerates mucinous and invasive adenoma development in the colorectum. These results define CRAD as a tumour suppressor, the inactivation of which deregulates the cytoskeleton and hyperactivates Wnt signalling thus initiating mucinous colorectal cancer. Our study reveals the unexpected roles of an actin cytoskeletal regulator in maintaining epithelial cell integrity and suppressing tumorigenesis.

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