Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition is not required for lung metastasis but contributes to chemoresistance

被引:0
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作者
Kari R. Fischer
Anna Durrans
Sharrell Lee
Jianting Sheng
Fuhai Li
Stephen T. C. Wong
Hyejin Choi
Tina El Rayes
Seongho Ryu
Juliane Troeger
Robert F. Schwabe
Linda T. Vahdat
Nasser K. Altorki
Vivek Mittal
Dingcheng Gao
机构
[1] Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University,Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery
[2] Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University,Department of Cell and Developmental Biology
[3] Neuberger Berman Lung Cancer Center,Department of Systems Medicine and Bioengineering
[4] Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University,Department of Medicine
[5] Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences,Department of Medicine
[6] Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University,undefined
[7] Houston Methodist Research Institute,undefined
[8] Houston Methodist Hospital,undefined
[9] Methodist Cancer Center,undefined
[10] Houston Methodist Hospital,undefined
[11] Soonchunhyang Institute of Medi-bio Science (SIMS),undefined
[12] Soonchunhyang University,undefined
[13] Columbia University,undefined
[14] College of Physicians and Surgeons,undefined
[15] Institute of Human Nutrition,undefined
[16] Columbia University,undefined
[17] Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University,undefined
来源
Nature | 2015年 / 527卷
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摘要
The role of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in metastasis is a longstanding source of debate, largely owing to an inability to monitor transient and reversible EMT phenotypes in vivo. Here we establish an EMT lineage-tracing system to monitor this process in mice, using a mesenchymal-specific Cre-mediated fluorescent marker switch system in spontaneous breast-to-lung metastasis models. We show that within a predominantly epithelial primary tumour, a small proportion of tumour cells undergo EMT. Notably, lung metastases mainly consist of non-EMT tumour cells that maintain their epithelial phenotype. Inhibiting EMT by overexpressing the microRNA miR-200 does not affect lung metastasis development. However, EMT cells significantly contribute to recurrent lung metastasis formation after chemotherapy. These cells survived cyclophosphamide treatment owing to reduced proliferation, apoptotic tolerance and increased expression of chemoresistance-related genes. Overexpression of miR-200 abrogated this resistance. This study suggests the potential of an EMT-targeting strategy, in conjunction with conventional chemotherapies, for breast cancer treatment.
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页码:472 / 476
页数:4
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