4.8 Article

Snail-induced claudin-11 prompts collective migration for tumour progression

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NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
卷 21, 期 2, 页码 251-+

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41556-018-0268-z

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  1. Division of Experimental Surgery of the Department of Surgery, Taipei Veterans General Hospital
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology [103-2633-H-010-001, 104-2321-B-010-005, 104-0210-01-09-02, 105-0210-01-13-01, 106-0210-01-15-02, 107-0210-01-19-01]
  3. National Health Research Institutes [NHRI-EX107-10622BI]
  4. Taipei Veterans General Hospital [V107C-071, V107D32-001-MY2-1, VTA105-V1-3-2, VTA106-V1-3-3, 107-V1-3-2]
  5. Veterans General Hospital-University System of Taiwan Joint Research Program [VGHUST107-G4-1-3]
  6. Cancer Progression Research Center of National Yang-Ming University - Featured Areas Research Center Program of the Ministry of Education
  7. Ministry of Health and Welfare, Center of Excellence for Cancer Research [MOHW107-TDU-B-211-114019]

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Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a pivotal mechanism for cancer dissemination. However, EMT-regulated individual cancer cell invasion is difficult to detect in clinical samples. Emerging evidence implies that EMT is correlated to collective cell migration and invasion with unknown mechanisms. We show that the EMT transcription factor Snail elicits collective migration in squamous cell carcinoma by inducing the expression of a tight junctional protein, claudin-11. Mechanistically, tyrosine-phosphorylated claudin-11 activates Src, which suppresses RhoA activity at intercellular junctions through p190RhoGAP, maintaining stable cell-cell contacts. In head and neck cancer patients, the Snail-claudin-11 axis prompts the formation of circulating tumour cell clusters, which correlate with tumour progression. Overexpression of snail correlates with increased claudin-11, and both are associated with a worse outcome. This finding extends the current understanding of EMT-mediated cellular migration via a non-individual type of movement to prompt cancer progression.

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