4.6 Article

Integrin v3-associated DAAM1 is essential for collagen-induced invadopodia extension and cell haptotaxis in breast cancer cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 293, Issue 26, Pages 10172-10185

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA117.000327

Keywords

breast cancer; actin; invadopodia; migration; integrin; DAAM1; haptotaxis; integrin v3; invadopodia; RHOA

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81472703]
  2. Jiangsu Overseas Research and Training Program for University Prominent Young and Middle-aged Teachers and Presidents
  3. Southeast University [2242017K3DN41]
  4. Nanjing Medical University [2242017K3DN41]

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The formin protein dishevelled-associated activator of morphogenesis 1 (DAAM1) polymerizes straight actin filaments and mediates migration of cancer cells. However, how DAAM1 governs cell haptotaxis in response to collagen remains unexplored in breast cancer cells. We hypothesized that DAAM1 mediates invadopodia extension and cell haptotaxis in response to type IV collagen in association with integrin receptors. Using Boyden chamber membranes coated with type IV collagen, we show here that type IV collagen activates both DAAM1 and Ras homolog family member A (RHOA) and promotes haptotaxis of MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-453 breast cancer cells, a process abolished by treatment with the integrin v3 inhibitor cyclo(-RGDfK). shRNA-mediated knockdown of DAAM1 or a dominant-negative DAAM1 mutation (N-DAAM1) significantly decreased collagen-induced RHOA activity and the assembly of stress fibers, invadopodia extension, and cell haptotaxis. Immunoprecipitation and pulldown assays revealed that integrin v3 is associated with, but only indirectly binds to, the C-terminal DAD domain of DAAM1 in mammalian cells. Blockade of RHOA activation with a specific inhibitor (CCG-1423) or via a dominant-negative RHOA mutation (RHOA-N19) suppressed collagen-induced invadopodia extension and haptotaxis of the MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MB-453 cells. Immunoblotting and immunofluorescence assays indicated high DAAM1 and RHOA expression in invadopodia, which was abolished by cyclo(-RGDfK) treatment or DAAM1 knockdown. These findings have uncovered an integrin v3/DAAM1/RHOA signaling pathway for type IV collagen-induced invadopodia extension and haptotaxis in breast cancer cells. Targeting this pathway may be a means for reducing invasiveness and metastasis of breast cancer.

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