Publication | Open Access
Claudin-2 Promotes Breast Cancer Liver Metastasis by Facilitating Tumor Cell Interactions with Hepatocytes
144
Citations
42
References
2012
Year
Breast OncologyPathologyCancer BiologyTumor BiologyTumor Cell InteractionsClaudin-2 LevelsCancer Cell BiologyMatrix BiologyRadiation OncologyCell SignalingHealth SciencesMedicineLiver PhysiologyCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentSkin MetastasesCell-matrix InteractionBreast CancerLiver CancerOncology
We previously identified claudin-2 as a functional mediator of breast cancer liver metastasis. We now confirm that claudin-2 levels are elevated in liver metastases, but not in skin metastases, compared to levels in their matched primary tumors in patients with breast cancer. Moreover, claudin-2 is specifically expressed in liver-metastatic breast cancer cells compared to populations derived from bone or lung metastases. The increased liver tropism exhibited by claudin-2-expressing breast cancer cells requires claudin-2-mediated interactions between breast cancer cells and primary hepatocytes. Furthermore, the reduction of the claudin-2 expression level, either in cancer cells or in primary hepatocytes, diminishes these heterotypic cell-cell interactions. Finally, we demonstrate that the first claudin-2 extracellular loop is essential for mediating tumor cell-hepatocyte interactions and the ability of breast cancer cells to form liver metastases in vivo. Thus, during breast cancer liver metastasis, claudin-2 shifts from acting within tight-junctional complexes to functioning as an adhesion molecule between breast cancer cells and hepatocytes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1