4.5 Review

Role of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in drug sensitivity and metastasis in bladder cancer

Journal

CANCER AND METASTASIS REVIEWS
Volume 28, Issue 3-4, Pages 335-344

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10555-009-9194-7

Keywords

Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; Epidermal growth factor receptor; Type-3 fibroblast growth factor receptor; Micro-RNA-mediated molecular reversal; Urothelial tumor

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P30 CA016672] Funding Source: Medline

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Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a process that plays essential roles in development and wound healing that is characterized by loss of homotypic adhesion and cell polarity and increased invasion and migration. At the molecular level, EMT is characterized by loss of E-cadherin and increased expression of several transcriptional repressors of E-cadherin expression (Zeb-1, Zeb-2, Twist, Snail, and Slug). Early work established that loss of E-cadherin and increased expression of MMP-9 was associated with a poor clinical outcome in patients with urothelial tumors, suggesting that EMT might also be associated with bladder cancer progression and metastasis. More recently, we have used global gene expression profiling to characterize the molecular heterogeneity in human urothelial cancer cell lines (n = 20) and primary patient tumors, and unsupervised clustering analyses revealed that the cells naturally segregate into two discrete epithelial and mesenchymal subsets, the latter consisting entirely of muscle-invasive tumors. Importantly, sensitivity to inhibitors of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or type-3 fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR3) was confined to the epithelial subset, and sensitivity to EGFR inhibitors could be reestablished by micro-RNA-mediated molecular reversal of EMT. The results suggest that EMT coordinately regulates drug resistance and muscle invasion/metastasis in urothelial cancer and is a dominant feature of overall cancer biology.

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