Login / Signup

c-Met activation leads to the establishment of a TGFβ-receptor regulatory network in bladder cancer progression.

Wen Jing SimPrasanna Vasudevan IyengarDilraj LamaSarah Kit Leng LuiHsien Chun NgLior Haviv-ShapiraEytan DomanyDennis KappeiTuan-Zea TanAzad SaeiPatrick William JaynesChandra Shekhar VermaAlan Prem KumarMathieu RouanneHong Koo HaCamelia RadulescuPeter Ten DijkePieter Johan Adam EichhornJean-Paul Thiery
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Treatment of muscle-invasive bladder cancer remains a major clinical challenge. Aberrant HGF/c-MET upregulation and activation is frequently observed in bladder cancer correlating with cancer progression and invasion. However, the mechanisms underlying HGF/c-MET-mediated invasion in bladder cancer remains unknown. As part of a negative feedback loop SMAD7 binds to SMURF2 targeting the TGFβ receptor for degradation. Under these conditions, SMAD7 acts as a SMURF2 agonist by disrupting the intramolecular interactions within SMURF2. We demonstrate that HGF stimulates TGFβ signalling through c-SRC-mediated phosphorylation of SMURF2 resulting in loss of SMAD7 binding and enhanced SMURF2 C2-HECT interaction, inhibiting SMURF2 and enhancing TGFβ receptor stabilisation. This upregulation of the TGFβ pathway by HGF leads to TGFβ-mediated EMT and invasion. In vivo we show that TGFβ receptor inhibition prevents bladder cancer invasion. Furthermore, we make a rationale for the use of combinatorial TGFβ and MEK inhibitors for treatment of high-grade non-muscle-invasive bladder cancers.
Keyphrases