Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Analysis of mechanisms underlying BRMS1 suppression of metastasis
Abstract  Introduction of normal, neomycin-tagged human chromosome 11 (neo11) reduces the metastatic capacity of MDA-MB-435 human breast         carcinoma cells by 70–90% without affecting tumorigenicity. Differential display comparing MDA-MB-435 and neo11/435 led to         the discovery of a human breast carcinoma metastasis suppressor gene, BRMS1, which maps to chromosome 11q13.1–q13.2. Stable transfectants of MDA-MB-435 and MDA-MB-231 breast carcinoma cells with BRMS1         cDNA still form progressively growing, locally invasive tumors when injected in mammary fat pads of athymic mice but exhibit         significantly lower metastatic potential (50–90% inhibition) to lungs and regional lymph nodes. To begin elucidating the mechanism(s)         of action, we measured the ability of BRMS1 to perturb individual steps of the metastatic cascade modeled in vitro. Consistent differences were not observed for adhesion to extracellular matrix components (laminin, fibronectin, type IV         collagen, type I collagen, Matrigel); growth rates in vitro or in vivo; expression of matrix metalloproteinases, heparanase, or invasion. Likewise, BRMS1 expression did not up regulate expression         of other metastasis suppressors, such as NM23, Kai1, KiSS1 or E-cadherin. Motility of BRMS1 transfectants was modestly inhibited         (30–60%) compared to parental and vector-only transfectants. Ability to grow in soft agar was also decreased in MDA-MB-435         cells by 80–89%, but the decrease for MDA-MB-231 was less (13–15% reduction). Also, transfection and re-expression of BRMS1         restored the ability of human breast carcinoma cells to form functional homotypic gap junctions. Collectively, these data         suggest that BRMS1 suppresses metastasis of human breast carcinoma by complex, atypical mechanisms.
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