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Role of the Cofilin Activity Cycle in Astrocytoma Migration and Invasion

Authors :
Brian Golbourn
Rocco Romagnuolo
Orlando Moreno
Stacey Ivanchuk
Shoichi Nagai
Adrienne Weeks
Christian A. Smith
James T. Rutka
Ho Jun Seol
Source :
Genes & Cancer. 2:859-869
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2011.

Abstract

The cofilin pathway plays a central role in the regulation of actin polymerization and the formation of cell membrane protrusions that are essential for cell migration. Overexpression of cofilin has been linked to the aggressiveness of a variety of different cancers. In these cancers, the phosphorylation of cofilin at Ser3 is a key regulatory mechanism modulating cofilin activity. The activation status of cofilin has been directly linked to tumor invasion. Accordingly, in this study, we examined the expression of cofilin and its activation status in astrocytoma cell lines and astrocytic tumors. We show that cofilin expression was increased and correlated with increasing grade malignant astrocytoma. In addition, both cofilin and LIMK had elevated expression in astrocytoma cell lines. Knockdown of cofilin by siRNA altered astrocytoma cell morphology and inhibited astrocytoma migration and invasion. Conversely, overexpression of a cofilin phosphorylation mutant in an in vivo intracranial xenograft model resulted in a more highly invasive phenotype than those xenographs expressing wild-type cofilin. Animals harboring astrocytomas stably expressing the cofilin phosphorylation mutant (cofilin-S3A) demonstrated marked local invasiveness and spread across the corpus callosum to the contralateral hemisphere in all animals. Taken together, these data indicate that the cofilin activity pathway may represent a novel therapeutic target to diminish the invasion of these highly malignant tumors.

Details

ISSN :
19476027 and 19476019
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genes & Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....359a92f7e72f417ef8d3985787e9d5ea
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1947601911431839