4.7 Article

Reduced WNT5A signaling in melanoma cells favors an amoeboid mode of invasion

Journal

MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 1835-1848

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/1878-0261.12974

Keywords

amoeboid; melanoma invasion; rho GTPase; WNT5A signaling

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Cancer Foundation
  2. Swedish Research Council
  3. Skane University Hospital Research Foundation
  4. Gunner Nilsson Cancer Foundation, Sweden
  5. Governmental Funding of Clinical Research within the National Health Services (ALF)
  6. Royal Physiographic Society of Lund, Sweden

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The study reveals that WNT5A signaling regulates the invasive behavior of melanoma cells by affecting Rho GTPase activity and morphology. Different WNT5A effects on Cdc42 in various melanoma cell types result in distinct invasion morphologies.
Tumor cells invade and spread via either a mesenchymal or an amoeboid mode of migration. Amoeboid tumor cells have a rounded morphology and pronounced RhoA activity. Here, we investigate how WNT5A signaling, a tumor promotor in melanoma, relates to Rho GTPase activity and amoeboid migration. We compared melanoma cells with low (HTB63 cells) and high (WM852 cells) WNT5A expression. HTB63 cells exhibited an amoeboid morphology and had higher RhoA activity but lower invasiveness than WM852 cells in a three-dimensional (3D) collagen matrix. We next explored the relationships between WNT5A, morphology, and invasive behavior. WNT5A knockdown impaired Rho GTPase Cdc42 activity, resulting in reduced invasion of amoeboid and mesenchymal melanoma cells. Interestingly, knockdown of WNT5A or inhibition of its secretion in WM852 cells expressing wild-type BRAF also led to increased RhoA activity via decreased RND3 expression, resulting in predominantly amoeboid morphology. In contrast, such treatments had the opposite effects on RND3 expression and RhoA activity in HTB63 cells expressing the active BRAF(V600) mutation. However, treatment of HTB63 cells with a BRAF inhibitor made them respond to WNT5A knockdown in a similar manner as WM852 cells expressing wild-type BRAF. We next found that dual targeting of WNT5A and RhoA more effectively reduced melanoma cell invasion than targeting either protein individually. Taken together, our results suggest that low WNT5A signaling in melanoma cells promotes a rounded amoeboid type of invasion, which quite likely serves as a compensatory response to decreased WNT5A/Cdc42-driven invasion. This phenomenon partially explains the enduring melanoma cell invasion observed after impaired WNT5A signaling and has therapeutic implications. Our results suggest that dual targeting of WNT5A and RhoA signaling is a more effective strategy for controlling the invasion of BRAF wild-type and BRAF(V600) mutated melanomas treated with a BRAF inhibitor than targeting either of the proteins individually.

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