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Constitutive activation of integrin αvβ3 contributes to anoikis resistance of ovarian cancer cells.

Romana DolinschekJulia HingerlAnke BengeChristian ZafiuElisabeth SchürenEva-Kathrin EhmoserDaniela LössnerUte Reuning
Published in: Molecular oncology (2020)
Epithelial ovarian cancer involves the shedding of single tumor cells or spheroids from the primary tumor into ascites, followed by their survival, and transit to the sites of metastatic colonization within the peritoneal cavity. During their flotation, anchorage-dependent epithelial-type tumor cells gain anoikis resistance, implicating integrins, including αvß3. In this study, we explored anoikis escape, cisplatin resistance, and prosurvival signaling as a function of the αvß3 transmembrane conformational activation state in cells suspended in ascites. A high-affinity and constitutively signaling-competent αvß3 variant, which harbored unclasped transmembrane domains, was found to confer delayed anoikis onset, enhanced cisplatin resistance, and reduced cell proliferation in ascites or 3D-hydrogels, involving p27kip upregulation. Moreover, it promoted EGF-R expression and activation, prosurvival signaling, implicating FAK, src, and PKB/Akt. This led to the induction of the anti-apoptotic factors Bcl-2 and survivin suppressing caspase activation, compared to a signaling-incapable αvß3 variant displaying firmly associated transmembrane domains. Dissecting the mechanistic players for αvß3-dependent survival and peritoneal metastasis of ascitic ovarian cancer spheroids is of paramount importance to target their anchorage independence by reversing anoikis resistance and blocking αvß3-triggered prosurvival signaling.
Keyphrases
  • cell proliferation
  • signaling pathway
  • cell death
  • induced apoptosis
  • poor prognosis
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • small cell lung cancer
  • cell free
  • cell cycle
  • molecular dynamics
  • cell cycle arrest
  • long non coding rna