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Epithelial-mesenchymal plasticity induced by discontinuous exposure to TGFβ1 promotes tumour growth

Authors :
Marta Ferreira
Mafalda Azevedo
David G. Huntsman
Joana Carvalho
Angela Burleigh
Alireza Heravi-Moussavi
Joana B. Nunes
Patrícia Oliveira
Daniel Ferreira
Ana André
Joana Paredes
André Filipe Vieira
Inês Leal Reis
Maria de Fátima Carneiro
Valdemar Máximo
João Vinagre
Sara Rocha
Mafalda Santos
Carla Oliveira
Nuno Mendes
Jorge Lima
Calvin D. Roskelley
Source :
Biology; Volume 11; Issue 7; Pages: 1046
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Transitions between epithelial and mesenchymal cellular states (EMT/MET) contribute to cancer progression. We hypothesize that EMT followed by MET promotes cell population heterogeneity favouring tumour growth. We developed an EMT model by on/off exposure of epithelial EpH4 cells (E-cells) to TGFβ1 that mimics phenotypic EMT (M-cells) and MET. We aimed at understanding whether phenotypic MET is accompanied by molecular and functional reversion back to epithelia, by using RNA sequencing, Immunofluorescence (IF), proliferation, wound healing, focus formation and mamosphere formation assays, as well as cell-xenografts in nude mice. Phenotypic reverted-epithelial cells (RE-cells), obtained after MET induction, presented pure epithelial morphology and proliferation rate resembling E-cells. However, RE transcriptomic profile and IF staining of epithelial and mesenchymal markers revealed a unique and heterogeneous mixture of cell-subpopulations, with high self-renewal ability fed by oxidative phosporylation. RE-cells heterogeneity is stably maintained for long periods after TGFβ1 removal, both in vitro and in large derived tumours in nude mice. Overall, we show that phenotypic reverted-epithelial cells (RE-cells) do not return to the molecular and functional epithelial state, present mesenchymal features related with aggressiveness and cellular heterogeneity that favour tumour growth in vivo. This work strengthens epithelial cells reprogramming and cellular heterogeneity fostered by inflammatory cues as a tumour-growth promoting factor in vivo.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biology; Volume 11; Issue 7; Pages: 1046
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....de34328f3b592e90d41e20644d372533
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.11.02.466914