|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Decoupling tumor cell metastasis from growth by cellular pilot protein TNFAIP8.

First Author  Li M Year  2021
Journal  Oncogene Volume  40
Issue  46 Pages  6456-6468
PubMed ID  34608264 Mgi Jnum  J:316089
Mgi Id  MGI:6833947 Doi  10.1038/s41388-021-02035-6
Citation  Li M, et al. (2021) Decoupling tumor cell metastasis from growth by cellular pilot protein TNFAIP8. Oncogene 40(46):6456-6468
abstractText  Cancer metastasis accounts for nearly 90% of all cancer deaths. Metastatic cancer progression requires both cancer cell migration to the site of the metastasis and subsequent proliferation after colonization. However, it has long been recognized that cancer cell migration and proliferation can be uncoupled; but the mechanism underlying this paradox is not well understood. Here we report that TNFAIP8 (tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced protein 8), a "professional" transfer protein of phosphoinositide second messengers, promotes cancer cell migration or metastasis but inhibits its proliferation or cancer growth. TNFAIP8-deficient mice developed larger tumors, but TNFAIP8-deficient tumor cells completely lost their ability to migrate toward chemoattractants and were defective in colonizing lung tissues as compared to wild-type counterparts. Mechanistically, TNFAIP8 served as a cellular "pilot" of tumor cell migration by locally amplifying PI3K-AKT and Rac signals on the cell membrane facing chemoattractant; at the same time, TNFAIP8 also acted as a global inhibitor of tumor cell growth and proliferation by regulating Hippo signaling pathway. These findings help explain the migration-proliferation paradox of cancer cells that characterizes many cancers.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

3 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression