Silencing of Growth Differentiation Factor-15 Promotes Breast Cancer Cell Invasion by Down-regulating Focal Adhesion Genes.
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Date
2020-03-01Author
Zaravinos, ApostolosGkretsi, Vasiliki
Andreas, Stylianou
Maria, Kalli
Maria, Louca
Chrysovalantis, Voutouri
Triantafyllos, Stylianopoulos
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As metastasis accounts for most breast cancer (BC)-related deaths, identifying key players becomes research priority. Growth differentiation factor-15 (GDF15), a member of the transforming growth factor-β superfamily, is affected by the actin cytoskeleton and has been associated with cancer. However, its exact role in BC cell invasiveness is vague. GDF15 short-hairpin (shRNA)-mediated silencing was used to inhibit GDF15 expression in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 BC cells and gene expression of relevant focal adhesion (FA) genes, cell migration, invasion and tumor spheroid invasion were subsequently analyzed. GDF15 silencing promoted cell migration, cell invasion as well as tumor spheroid invasion and up-regulated urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and FA genes, integrin-linked kinase (ILK), LIM zinc finger domain containing 1 (LIMS1), α-parvin (PARVA), and RAS suppressor-1 (RSU1). Computational analysis of Cancer Genome Atlas BC dataset however, revealed no significant correlation between GDF15 expression and metastasis pointing towards a more complex molecular interplay between GDF15, actin cytoskeleton and FA-related genes which ultimately affects their expression pattern, in vivo. GDF15 suppresses BC cell invasion in vitro through down-regulation of FA genes but its role in BC is more complicated in vivo and warrants further investigation.
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