Dysadherin awakens mechanical forces and promotes colorectal cancer progression

So Yeon Park, Choong Jae Lee, Jang Hyun Choi, Jee Heun Kim, Won Jae Lee, Tae Young Jang, So El Jeon, Jae Hyun Kim, Sang Hee Cho, Ji Shin Lee, Jeong Seok Nam

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Rationale: Dysadherin is a tumor-associated, membrane-embedded antigen found in multiple types of cancer cells, and associated with malignant behavior of cancer cells; however, the fundamental molecular mechanism by which dysadherin drives aggressive phenotypes of cancer is not yet fully determined. Methods: To get a mechanistic insight, we explored the physiological relevance of dysadherin on intestinal tumorigenesis using dysadherin knockout mice and investigated its impact on clinicopathological features in patients with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC). Next, to discover the downstream signaling pathways of dysadherin, we applied bioinformatic analysis using gene expression data of CRC patient tumors and dysadherin knockout cancer cells. Additionally, comprehensive proteomic and molecular analyses were performed to identify dysadherin-interacting proteins and their functions. Results: Dysadherin deficiency suppressed intestinal tumorigenesis in both genetic and chemical mouse models. Moreover, increased dysadherin expression in cancer cells accounted for shorter survival in CRC patients. Comprehensive bioinformatics analyses suggested that the effect of dysadherin deletion is linked to a reduction in the extracellular matrix receptor signaling pathway. Mechanistically, the extracellular domain of dysadherin bound fibronectin and enhanced cancer cell adhesion to fibronectin, facilitating the activation of integrin-mediated mechanotransduction and leading to yes-associated protein 1 activation. Dysadherin-fibronectin interaction promoted cancer cell growth, survival, migration, and invasion, effects collectively mediated the protumor activity of dysadherin. Conclusion: Our results highlight a novel function of dysadherin as a driver of mechanotransduction that stimulates CRC progression, providing a potential therapy strategy for CRC.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4399-4414
Number of pages16
JournalTheranostics
Volume12
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The author(s).

Keywords

  • Colorectal Cancer
  • Dysadherin
  • Fibronectin
  • Mouse Model
  • Yes-associated Protein 1

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