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Regulated lysosomal exocytosis mediates cancer progression

Authors :
Rosario Mosca
David Finkelstein
Alessandra d'Azzo
Ida Annunziata
Xiaohui Qiu
Elida Gomero
Simon Moshiach
Christopher L. Morton
Yvan Campos
Shai White-Gilbertson
Diantha van de Vlekkert
Eda Machado
Laura J. Janke
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2015.

Abstract

LAMP1 oversialylation results in excessive lysosomal exocytosis, promoting tumor invasion and drug resistance.<br />Understanding how tumor cells transition to an invasive and drug-resistant phenotype is central to cancer biology, but the mechanisms underlying this transition remain unclear. We show that sarcomas gain these malignant traits by inducing lysosomal exocytosis, a ubiquitous physiological process. During lysosomal exocytosis, the movement of exocytic lysosomes along the cytoskeleton and their docking at the plasma membrane involve LAMP1, a sialylated membrane glycoprotein and target of the sialidase NEU1. Cleavage of LAMP1 sialic acids by NEU1 limits the extent of lysosomal exocytosis. We found that by down-regulation of NEU1 and accumulation of oversialylated LAMP1, tumor cells exacerbate lysosomal exocytosis of soluble hydrolases and exosomes. This facilitates matrix invasion and propagation of invasive signals, and purging of lysosomotropic chemotherapeutics. In Arf−⁄− mice, Neu1 haploinsufficiency fostered the development of invasive, pleomorphic sarcomas, expressing epithelial and mesenchymal markers, and lysosomal exocytosis effectors, LAMP1 and Myosin-11. These features are analogous to those of metastatic, pleomorphic human sarcomas, where low NEU1 levels correlate with high expression of lysosomal exocytosis markers. In a therapeutic proof of principle, we demonstrate that inhibiting lysosomal exocytosis reversed invasiveness and chemoresistance in aggressive sarcoma cells. Thus, we reveal that this unconventional, lysosome-regulated pathway plays a primary role in tumor progression and chemoresistance.

Details

ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....986932d66ddef9ca589ca95a18555f13
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1500603