4.7 Article

Role of c-Met/β1 integrin complex in the metastatic cascade in breast cancer

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.138928

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [1R01CA227136, 2R01NS079697, 1F31CA203372-01]
  2. CTSI TL1 postdoctoral fellowship
  3. Neurosurgery Research Education Foundation
  4. UCSF Yearlong Inquiry Program

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The study found that the c-Met/beta 1 complex plays a crucial role in promoting intravasation and vessel wall adhesion of triple-negative breast cancer cells, potentially increasing mesenchymal and stem cell characteristics. Therapeutic approaches targeting this complex can reduce invasion and metastasis of breast cancer cells, as well as decrease the risk of bone metastases.
Metastases cause 90% of human cancer deaths. The metastatic cascade involves local invasion, intravasation, extravasation, metastatic site colonization, and proliferation. Although individual mediators of these processes have been investigated, interactions between these mediators remain less well defined. We previously identified a complex between receptor tyrosine kinase c-Met and beta 1 integrin in metastases. Using cell culture and in vivo assays, we found that c-Met/beta 1 complex induction promoted intravasation and vessel wall adhesion in triple-negative breast cancer cells, but did not increase extravasation. These effects may have been driven by the ability of the c-Met/beta 1 complex to increase mesenchymal and stem cell characteristics. Multiplex transcriptomic analysis revealed upregulated Wnt and hedgehog pathways after c-Met/beta 1 complex induction. A beta 1 integrin point mutation that prevented binding to c-Met reduced intravasation. OS2966, a therapeutic antibody disrupting c-Met/beta 1 binding, decreased breast cancer cell invasion and mesenchymal gene expression. Bone-seeking breast cancer cells exhibited higher levels of c-Met/beta 1 complex than parental controls and preferentially adhered to tissue-specific matrix. Patient bone metastases demonstrated higher c-Met/beta 1 complex than brain metastases. Thus, the c-Met/beta 1 complex drove intravasation of triple-negative breast cancer cells and preferential affinity for bone-specific matrix. Pharmacological targeting of the complex may have prevented metastases, particularly osseous metastases.

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