Chemical modulation of VLA integrin affinity in human breast cancer cells.
Fecha
2007Resumen
The fact that disruption of integrin–extracellular matrix contacts leads to cell death, has
converted cell adhesion into a potential target for the control of invasive cancer. In this
work, we studied the functional consequences of the interference with the activity of the
very late activation antigen (VLA) family of integrins in human breast cancer cell lines of
distinct malignancy. The α2β1-mediated adhesion reduced the entry of highly malignant,
hormone-independent breast cancer cells into apoptosis. Adhesion of breast cancer cells
through the VLA integrins α2β1 and α5β1 was significantly reduced by an apoptosisinducing natural triterpenoid, dehydrothyrsiferol (DT), when studied on low amounts of
extracellular matrix. This effect was dose-dependent, not related to cell toxicity and not
shared with apoptosis-inducing standard chemotherapeutics, such as doxorubicin and
taxol. The compound did not affect either the cell surface expression level of VLA integrins
or cell distribution of vinculin and actin during cell spreading. In addition, neither
phosphorylation of the focal adhesion kinase pp125FAK on Tyr397 nor the protein kinase
B (Akt/PKB) on Ser473 was significantly altered by DT. The integrin activation level, assessed
by binding of soluble collagen to the α2β1 integrin, was reduced upon cell treatment with
DT. Importantly, the TS2/16, an anti-β1 activating monoclonal antibody was able to rescue
DT-treated cells from apoptosis. Since the activation state of integrins is increasingly
recognized as an essential factor in metastasis formation, findings presented herein reveal
that the chemical regulation of integrin affinity may be a potential therapeutic strategy in
cancer therapy.