Abstract

Early metastasis leads to poor prognosis of lung cancer patients, whose 5-year survival rate is only 15%. We could recently show that the Ca2+ sensitive K+ channel KCa3.1 promotes aggressive behavior of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells and that it can serve as a prognostic marker in NSCLC. Since NSCLC patients die of metastases, we investigated whether KCa3.1 channels contribute to poor patient prognosis by regulating distinct steps of the metastatic cascade. We investigated the extravasation of NSCLC cells and focused on their adhesion to endothelial cells and on transendothelial migration. We quantified the adhesion forces between NSCLC cells and endothelial cells by applying single cell force spectroscopy, and we monitored transendothelial migration using live-cell imaging. Inhibition of KCa3.1 channels with senicapoc or KCa3.1 silencing increases the adhesion force of A549 lung cancer cells to human microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC-1). Western blotting, immunofluorescence staining and biotinylation assays indicate that the elevated adhesion force is due to increased expression of ICAM-1 in both cell lines when KCa3.1 channels are downregulated. Consistent with this interpretation, an anti-ICAM-1 blocking antibody abolishes the KCa3.1-dependent increase in adhesion. Senicapoc inhibits transendothelial migration of A549 cells by 50%. Selectively silencing KCa3.1 channels in either NSCLC or endothelial cells reveals that transendothelial migration depends predominantly on endothelial KCa3.1 channels.In conclusion, our findings disclose a novel function of KCa3.1 channels in cancer. KCa3.1 channels regulate ICAM-1 dependent cell-cell adhesion between endothelial and cancer cells that affects the transmigration step of the metastatic cascade.

Highlights

  • Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death

  • Since non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients die of metastases, we investigated whether KCa3.1 channels contribute to poor patient prognosis by regulating distinct steps of the metastatic cascade

  • Extravasation is a crucial step of the metastatic cascade of NSCLC cells

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Summary

Introduction

The death rates of patients with cancers of the lung and bronchus are the highest in men and women in the United States [1]. Lung cancer is frequently diagnosed at late stages, when distant metastases have already developed. Cancer cells leave the primary tumor and enter the bloodstream (intravasation). The extravasation of tumor cells bears many similarities with the recruitment of immune cells [3], but the molecular mechanisms underlying tumor cell extravasation are not well understood. Given the importance of tumor metastasis for patient survival and because of limited www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget success of current therapies for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), there is a clear need for the development of new concepts in the understanding of the metastatic cascade

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