上皮-间质转化(EMT)对转移性传播有多重要?

Torre-Healy La, Chia-Hsin Chan
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摘要

上皮-间质转化(Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition, EMT)一直被认为是乳腺癌肺转移的关键[1]。过渡到间充质表型的细胞失去其粘附特性并变得越来越活跃。在体内模型中,Snail、Zebl、Twist等EMT相关基因的沉默与转移减少相关,表明EMT在转移中起着关键作用[2-4]。然而,对原发肿瘤和转移灶内肿瘤细胞的分析显示主要是上皮标记物。目前,人们认为细胞在定植到新的器官环境后会经历间充质-上皮转化(Mesenchymal-to-Epithelial Transition, MET)[5]。Fischer等人最近发表的一篇文章利用Cre/CreER谱系追踪遗传小鼠模型探讨了EMT在乳腺癌转移中的必要性[6]。通过分别使用Cre和CreER生成成纤维细胞特异性蛋白1 (FSP1)-GFP和Vimentin-GFP报告小鼠系,他们报告说,未经历EMT的癌细胞仍然与经历过EMT的癌细胞一样多地转移。2017年,Ye等人仔细研究了vimentin和FSP1启动子对EMT程序的激活以及CreER的重组效率的选择,对这篇论文的结论提出了质疑[7]。我们将讨论两种相互矛盾的出版物所持的立场,并提供超越光亚型乳腺癌的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Just How Critical is Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT) to Metastatic Dissemination?
Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT) has long been considered to be critical for the development of lung metastasis in breast cancer [1]. Cells that transition to a mesenchymal phenotype lose their adherent properties and become increasingly motile. Silencing of Snail, Zebl, Twist and other EMT associated genes correlate with a decrease in metastasis in in vivo models, and point to a critical role of EMT in metastasis [2–4]. However, analysis of tumor cells within both the primary tumor and metastatic lesions show primarily epithelial markers. Currently, it is believed that cells undergo Mesenchymal-to-Epithelial Transition (MET) following their colonization into a new organ environment [5]. A recent publication by Fischer et al., used the Cre/CreER lineage-tracing genetic mouse model to explore the necessity of EMT in breast cancer metastasis [6]. Through their generation of Fibroblast Specific Protein 1 (FSP1)-GFP and Vimentin-GFP reporter mouase lines, using Cre and CreER respectively, they reported that cancer cells that had not undergone EMT still metastasized just as much as those that had. The conclusions of this paper were brought into question in 2017 by Ye et al., following close scrutiny of selection ofVimentin and FSP1 promoters for the activation of EMT programs as well as the recombination efficiency of CreER [7]. We will discuss the positions held by the two contradictory publications and provide insight beyond luminal-subtype breast cancer.
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