4.6 Article

Detyrosinated microtubule protrusions in suspended mammary epithelial cells promote reattachment

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH
Volume 313, Issue 7, Pages 1326-1336

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2007.02.001

Keywords

cytoskeleton; tubulin; apoptosis; protrusions; breast; tumor; actin; metastasis; adhesion; mammary

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01 CA124704-01, K01 CA096555, K01 CA096555-05, P30 CA134274, R01 CA124704, K01-CA096555, K01 CA096555-04] Funding Source: Medline

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Breast tumor cells enter the bloodstream long before the development of clinically evident metastasis. However, the early presence of such bloodborne cells predicts poor patient outcome. Nearly 90% of human breast tumors arise as carcinomas from mammary epithelial cells, so it is important to study how these cells respond to the detached conditions that they would experience in the bloodstream. We report here that mammary epithelial cell lines produce long and dynamic protrusions of the plasma membrane when detached. Although human and mouse mammary epithelial cell lines die by apoptosis within 16 h of detachment, this protrusive response persists for days in cells overexpressing either Bcl-2 or Bcl-xL. Unlike actin-dependent invadopodia and podosomes, these protrusions are actually enhanced by actin depolymerization with Cytochalasin-D or Latrunculin-A. Immunofluorescence and Western blotting demonstrate that the protrusions are enriched in detyrosinated Glu-tubulin, a post-translation ally modified form of alpha-tubulin that is found in stabilized microtubules. Video microscopy indicates that these protrusions promote cell-cell attachment, and inhibiting microtubule-based protrusions correlates with reduced extracellular matrix attachment. Since bloodborne metastasis depends on both cell-cell and cell-matrix attachment, microtubule-based protrusions in detached mammary epithelial cells provide a novel mechanism that could influence the metastatic spread of breast tumors. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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