Abstract
By screening a tissue microarray of invasive breast tumors, we have shown that the receptor tyrosine kinase RET (REarranged during Transfection) and its coreceptor GFR alpha 1 (GDNF receptor family alpha-1) are overexpressed in a subset of estrogen receptor-positive tumors. Germ line-activating oncogenic mutations in RET allow this receptor to signal independently of GFR alpha 1 and its ligand glial cell-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) to promote a spectrum of endocrine neoplasias. However, it is not known whether tumor progression can also be driven by receptor overexpression and whether expression of GDNF, as has been suggested for other neurotrophic factors, is regulated in response to the inflammatory microenvironment surrounding many epithelial cancers. Here, we show that GDNF stimulation of RET(+)/GFR alpha 1(+) MCF7 breast cancer cells in vitro enhanced cell proliferation and survival, and promoted cell scattering. Moreover, in tumor xenografts, GDNF expression was found to be up-regulated on the infiltrating endogenous fibroblasts and to a lesser extent by the tumor cells themselves. Finally, the inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1 beta, which are involved in tumor promotion and development, were found to act synergistically to up-regulate GDNF expression in both fibroblasts and tumor cells. These data indicate that GDNF can act as an important component of the inflammatory response in breast cancers and that its effects are mediated by both paracrine and autocrine stimulation of tumor cells via signaling through the RET and GFR alpha 1 receptors.
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