Osteopontin Knockdown Suppresses Tumorigenicity of Human Metastatic Breast Carcinoma, MDA-MB-435

被引:0
|
作者
Lalita A. Shevde
Rajeev S. Samant
Jason C. Paik
Brandon J. Metge
Ann F. Chambers
Graham Casey
Andra R. Frost
Danny R. Welch
机构
[1] University of South Alabama-Mitchell Cancer Institute,Department of Pathology
[2] The University of Alabama at Birmingham,Comprehensive Cancer Center
[3] The University of Alabama at Birmingham,NFCR
[4] University of Alabama,Center for Metastasis Research
[5] The London Regional Cancer Program,Department of Cancer Biology
[6] Lerner Research Institute,undefined
[7] Cleveland Clinic Lerner School of Medicine,undefined
来源
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 2006年 / 23卷
关键词
Osteopontin; RNA interference; Invasion; Migration; Tumorigenicity; Breast cancer;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Elevated expression of osteopontin (OPN), a secreted phosphoglycoprotein, is frequently associated with many transformed cell lines. Various studies suggest that OPN may contribute to tumor progression as well as metastasis in multiple tumor types. High levels of OPN have been reported in patients with metastatic cancers, including breast. We found that the expression of OPN corroborates with the aggressive phenotype of the breast cancer cells i.e. the expression of OPN is acquired as the breast cancer cells become more aggressive. To assess the role(s) of OPN in breast carcinoma, expression of endogenous OPN was knocked down in metastatic MDA-MB-435 human breast carcinoma cells using RNA interference. We targeted multiple regions of the OPN transcript for RNA interference, along with ‘scrambled’ and ‘non-targeting siRNA pool’ controls to distinguish between target-specific and potential off-target effects including interferon-response gene (PeIF2-α) induction. The OPN knockdown by shRNA suppressed tumor take in immunocompromised mice. The ‘silenced’ cells also showed significantly lower invasion and migration in modified Boyden chamber assays and reduced ability to grow in soft agar. Thus, in addition to the widely reported roles of OPN in late stages of tumor progression, these results provide functional evidence that OPN contributes to breast tumor growth as well.
引用
收藏
页码:123 / 133
页数:10
相关论文
empty
未找到相关数据