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Gene Editing of α6 Integrin Inhibits Muscle Invasive Networks and Increases Cell-Cell Biophysical Properties in Prostate Cancer.

Authors :
Rubenstein CS
Gard JMC
Wang M
McGrath JE
Ingabire N
Hinton JP
Marr KD
Simpson SJ
Nagle RB
Miranti CK
Warfel NA
Garcia JGN
Arif-Tiwari H
Cress AE
Source :
Cancer research [Cancer Res] 2019 Sep 15; Vol. 79 (18), pp. 4703-4714. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jul 23.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Human prostate cancer confined to the gland is indolent (low-risk), but tumors outside the capsule are aggressive (high-risk). Extracapsular extension requires invasion within and through a smooth muscle-structured environment. Because integrins respond to biomechanical cues, we used a gene editing approach to determine if a specific region of laminin-binding α6β1 integrin was required for smooth muscle invasion both in vitro and in vivo . Human tissue specimens showed prostate cancer invasion through smooth muscle and tumor coexpression of α6 integrin and E-cadherin in a cell-cell location and α6 integrin in a cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) distribution. Prostate cancer cells expressing α6 integrin (DU145 α6WT) produced a 3D invasive network on laminin-containing Matrigel and invaded into smooth muscle both in vitro and in vivo . In contrast, cells without α6 integrin (DU145 α6KO) and cells expressing an integrin mutant (DU145 α6AA) did not produce invasive networks, could not invade muscle both in vitro and in vivo , and surprisingly formed 3D cohesive clusters. Using electric cell-substrate impedance testing, cohesive clusters had up to a 30-fold increase in normalized resistance at 400 Hz (cell-cell impedance) as compared with the DU145 α6WT cells. In contrast, measurements at 40,000 Hz (cell-ECM coverage) showed that DU145 α6AA cells were two-fold decreased in normalized resistance and were defective in restoring resistance after a 1 μmol/L S1P challenge as compared with the DU145 α6WT cells. The results suggest that gene editing of a specific α6 integrin extracellular region, not required for normal tissue function, can generate a new biophysical cancer phenotype unable to invade the muscle, presenting a new therapeutic strategy for metastasis prevention in prostate cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: This study shows an innovative strategy to block prostate cancer metastasis and invasion in the muscle through gene editing of a specific α6 integrin extracellular region.<br /> (©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1538-7445
Volume :
79
Issue :
18
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31337652
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-19-0868