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Hypoxia promotes invasive growth by transcriptional activation of the met protooncogene

Authors :
Silvia Giordano
Paolo Michieli
Selma Pennacchietti
Maria Galluzzo
Massimiliano Mazzone
Paolo M. Comoglio
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Cell Press, 2003.

Abstract

Hypoxia unleashes the invasive and metastatic potential of tumor cells by largely unknown mechanisms. The Met tyrosine kinase, a high affinity receptor for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), plays a crucial role in controlling invasive growth and is often overexpressed in cancer. Here we show that: (1) hypoxia activates transcription of the met protooncogene, resulting in higher levels of Met; (2) hypoxic areas of tumors overexpress Met; (3) hypoxia amplifies HGF signaling; (4) hypoxia synergizes with HGF in inducing invasion; (5) the proinvasive effects of hypoxia are mimicked by Met overexpression; and (6) inhibition of Met expression prevents hypoxia-induced invasive growth. These data show that hypoxia promotes tumor invasion by sensitizing cells to HGF stimulation, providing a molecular basis to explain Met overexpression in cancer. ispartof: Cancer Cell vol:3 issue:4 pages:347-361 ispartof: location:United States status: published

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....47ec8f42e75a428a018a11a5611fd6e1