Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

TGF-beta1 and Ha-Ras collaborate in modulating the phenotypic plasticity and invasiveness of epithelial tumor cells.

680

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61

References

1996

Year

TLDR

Epithelial tumor metastasis involves acquiring fibroblastoid traits that enable invasion of stroma and blood vessels. In Ras‑transformed mammary epithelial cells, TGF‑β1 induces a fibroblastoid, invasive phenotype that is maintained by autocrine TGF‑β1 secretion and recruitment of additional cells, whereas normal cells undergo growth arrest; this Ras–TGF‑β1 cooperation drives tumorigenesis in vivo through epithelial–stromal interactions.

Abstract

Metastasis of epithelial tumor cells can be associated with the acquisition of fibroblastoid features and the ability to invade stroma and blood vessels. Using matched in vivo and in vitro culture systems employing fully polarized, mammary epithelial cells, we report here that TGF-beta1 brings about these changes in Ras-transformed cells but not in normal cells. When grown in collagen gels in the absence of TGF-beta, both normal and Ras-transformed mammary epithelial cells form organ-like structures in which the cells maintain their epithelial characteristics. Under these conditions, treatment of normal cells with TGF-beta results in growth arrest. The same treatment renders Ras-transformed epithelial cells fibroblastoid, invasive, and resistant to growth inhibition by TGF-beta. After this epithelial-fibroblastoid conversion, the Ras-transformed cells start to secrete TGF-beta themselves, leading to autocrine maintenance of the invasive phenotype and recruitment of additional cells to become fibroblastoid and invasive. More important, this cooperation of activated Ha-Ras with TGF-beta1 is operative during in vivo tumorigenesis and, as in wound healing processes, is dependent on epithelial-stromal interactions.

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