Zhu Qingwei, Krakowski Ariel R, Dunham Elizabeth E, Wang Long, Bandyopadhyay Abhik, Berdeaux Rebecca, Martin G Steven, Sun LuZhe, Luo Kunxin
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-3204, USA.
Mol Cell Biol. 2007 Jan;27(1):324-39. doi: 10.1128/MCB.01394-06. Epub 2006 Oct 30.
SnoN is an important negative regulator of transforming growth factor beta signaling through its ability to interact with and repress the activity of Smad proteins. It was originally identified as an oncoprotein based on its ability to induce anchorage-independent growth in chicken embryo fibroblasts. However, the roles of SnoN in mammalian epithelial carcinogenesis have not been well defined. Here we show for the first time that SnoN plays an important but complex role in human cancer. SnoN expression is highly elevated in many human cancer cell lines, and this high level of SnoN promotes mitogenic transformation of breast and lung cancer cell lines in vitro and tumor growth in vivo, consistent with its proposed pro-oncogenic role. However, this high level of SnoN expression also inhibits epithelial-to-mesenchymal transdifferentiation. Breast and lung cancer cells expressing the shRNA for SnoN exhibited an increase in cell motility, actin stress fiber formation, metalloprotease activity, and extracellular matrix production as well as a reduction in adherens junction proteins. Supporting this observation, in an in vivo breast cancer metastasis model, reducing SnoN expression was found to moderately enhance metastasis of human breast cancer cells to bone and lung. Thus, SnoN plays both pro-tumorigenic and antitumorigenic roles at different stages of mammalian malignant progression. The growth-promoting activity of SnoN appears to require its ability to bind to and repress the Smad proteins, while the antitumorigenic activity can be mediated by both Smad-dependent and Smad-independent pathways and requires the activity of small GTPase RhoA. Our study has established the importance of SnoN in mammalian epithelial carcinogenesis and revealed a novel aspect of SnoN function in malignant progression.
SnoN是转化生长因子β信号通路的重要负调节因子,它能够与Smad蛋白相互作用并抑制其活性。最初,因其能够诱导鸡胚成纤维细胞的非锚定依赖性生长,SnoN被鉴定为一种癌蛋白。然而,SnoN在哺乳动物上皮癌发生中的作用尚未明确。在此,我们首次表明SnoN在人类癌症中发挥着重要但复杂的作用。SnoN在许多人类癌细胞系中高度表达,这种高水平的SnoN在体外促进乳腺癌和肺癌细胞系的有丝分裂转化以及在体内促进肿瘤生长,这与其假定的促癌作用一致。然而,这种高水平的SnoN表达也抑制上皮-间质转分化。表达SnoN的短发夹RNA的乳腺癌和肺癌细胞表现出细胞运动性增加、肌动蛋白应激纤维形成、金属蛋白酶活性和细胞外基质产生增加以及黏附连接蛋白减少。支持这一观察结果的是,在体内乳腺癌转移模型中,发现降低SnoN表达可适度增强人类乳腺癌细胞向骨和肺的转移。因此,SnoN在哺乳动物恶性进展的不同阶段发挥着促肿瘤和抗肿瘤作用。SnoN的生长促进活性似乎需要其与Smad蛋白结合并抑制Smad蛋白的能力,而抗肿瘤活性可由Smad依赖性和Smad非依赖性途径介导,并且需要小GTP酶RhoA的活性。我们的研究确立了SnoN在哺乳动物上皮癌发生中的重要性,并揭示了SnoN在恶性进展中功能的一个新方面。