4.4 Article

RANK- and c-Met-mediated signal network promotes prostate cancer metastatic colonization

Journal

ENDOCRINE-RELATED CANCER
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 311-326

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/ERC-13-0548

Keywords

RANKL; RANK; c-Met; prostate cancer; metastasis; cancer dormancy

Funding

  1. NCI P01 grant [2P01CA098912]
  2. PCF Challenge Award
  3. NCI R01 grant [1R01CA122602]

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Prostate cancer (PCa) metastasis to bone is lethal and there is no adequate animal model for studying the mechanisms underlying the metastatic process. Here, we report that receptor activator of NF-kappa B ligand (RANKL) expressed by PCa cells consistently induced colonization or metastasis to bone in animal models. RANK-mediated signaling established a premetastatic niche through a feed-forward loop, involving the induction of RANKL and c-Met, but repression of androgen receptor (AR) expression and AR signaling pathways. Site-directed mutagenesis and transcription factor (TF) deletion/interference assays identified common TF complexes, c-Myc/Max, and AP4 as critical regulatory nodes. RANKL-RANK signaling activated a number of master regulator TFs that control the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (Twist1, Slug, Zeb1, and Zeb2), stem cell properties (Sox2, Myc, Oct3/4, and Nanog), neuroendocrine differentiation (Sox9, HIF1 alpha, and FoxA2), and osteomimicry (c-Myc/Max, Sox2, Sox9, HIF1 alpha, and Runx2). Abrogating RANK or its downstream c-Myc/Max or c-Met signaling network minimized or abolished skeletal metastasis in mice. RANKL-expressing LNCaP cells recruited and induced neighboring non metastatic LNCaP cells to express RANKL, c-Met/activated c-Met, while downregulating AR expression. These initially non-metastatic cells, once retrieved from the tumors, acquired the potential to colonize and grow in bone. These findings identify a novel mechanism of tumor growth in bone that involves tumor cell reprogramming via RANK-RANKL signaling, as well as a form of signal amplification that mediates recruitment and stable transformation of non-metastatic bystander dormant cells.

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