4.6 Article

PDGF receptor-α promotes TGF-β signaling in hepatic stellate cells via transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulation of TGF-β receptors

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.00138.2014

Keywords

tumor microenvironment; myofibroblasts; colorectal liver metastasis; receptor endocytosis and trafficking; gene transcription

Funding

  1. P/F Award
  2. Clinical and Cell Biology Cores of the Mayo Clinic Center for Cell Signaling in Gastroenterology [P30DK084567]
  3. NIH [R01 CA160069, R01 DK059615, AA021171]
  4. China Scholarship Council (CSC)

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Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) signaling are required for hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation under pathological conditions such as liver metastatic tumor growth. These two signaling pathways are functionally divergent; PDGF signaling promotes proliferation and migration of HSCs, and TGF-beta induces transdifferentiation of quiescent HSCs into myofibroblasts. Although PDGF signaling is implicated in TGF-beta-mediated epithelial mesenchymal transition of tumor cells, the role of PDGF receptors in TGF-beta activation of HSCs has not been investigated. Here we report that PDGF receptor-alpha (PDGFR-alpha) is required for TGF-beta signaling of cultured human HSCs although HSCs express both PDGF-alpha and -beta receptors. PDGFR-alpha knockdown inhibits TGF-beta-induced phosphorylation and nuclear accumulation of SMAD2 with no influence on AKT or ERK phosphorylation associated with non-canonical TGF-beta signaling. PDGFR-alpha knockdown suppresses TGF-beta receptor I (T beta RI) but increases T beta RII gene transcription. At the protein level, PDGFR-alpha is recruited to T beta RI/T beta RII complexes by TGF-beta stimulation. PDGFR-alpha knockdown blocks TGF-beta-mediated internalization of T beta RII and induces accumulation of T beta RII at the plasma membrane, thereby inhibiting TGF-beta phosphorylation of SMAD2. Functionally, knockdown of PDGFR-alpha reduces paracrine effects of HSCs on colorectal cancer cell proliferation and migration in vitro. In mice and patients, colorectal cancer cell invasion of the liver induces upregulation of PDGFR-alpha of HSCs. In summary, our finding that PDGFR-alpha knockdown inhibits SMAD-dependent TGF-beta signaling by repressing T beta RI transcriptionally and blocking endocytosis of TGF-beta receptors highlights a convergence of PDGF and TGF-beta signaling for HSC activation and PDGFR-alpha as a therapeutic target for liver metastasis and other settings of HSC activation.

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