|
|
Signal pathway profiling of epithelial and stromal compartments of colonic carcinoma
reveals epithelial-mesenchymal transition
Sheehan KM, Gulmann C, Eichler GS, Weinstein JN, Barrett HL, Kay EW, Conroy RM, Liotta LA, Petricoin EF
Oncogene. 2007 Jul 9
Abstract:
Molecular crosstalk, including reciprocal stimulation, is theorized to take place between epithelial cancer
cells and surrounding non-neoplastic stromal cells. This is the rationale for stromal therapy, which could eliminate
support of a cancer by its genetically stable stroma. Epithelial-stromal crosstalk is so far poorly documented in vivo,
and cell cultures and animal experiments may not provide accurate models. The current study details stromal-epithelial
signalling pathways in 35 human colon cancers, and compares them with matched normal tissues using quantitative proteomic
microarrays. Lysates prepared from separately microdissected epithelium and stroma were analysed using antibodies against
61 cell signalling proteins, most of which recognize activated phospho-isoforms. Analyses using unsupervised and supervised
statistical methods suggest that cell signalling pathway profiles in stroma and epithelium appear more similar to each
other in tumours than in normal colon. This supports the concept that coordinated crosstalk occurs between epithelium and
stroma in cancer and suggests epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Furthermore, the data herein suggest that it is driven by
cell proliferation pathways and that, specifically, several key molecules within the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway
may play an important role. Given recent findings of epithelial-mesenchymal transition in therapy-resistant tumour epithelium,
these findings could have therapeutic implications for colon cancer.
|