Abstract

Metastasis is the main cause of carcinoma-related death, yet we know little about how it initiates due to our inability to visualize stochastic invasion events. Classical models suggest that cells accumulate mutations that first drive formation of a primary mass, and then downregulate epithelia-specific genes to cause invasion and metastasis. Here, using transparent zebrafish epidermis to model simple epithelia, we can directly image invasion. We find that KRas-transformation, implicated in early carcinogenesis steps, directly drives cell invasion by hijacking a process epithelia normally use to promote death—cell extrusion. Cells invading by basal cell extrusion simultaneously pinch off their apical epithelial determinants, endowing new plasticity. Following invasion, cells divide, enter the bloodstream, and differentiate into stromal, neuronal-like, and other cell types. Yet, only invading KRasV12 cells deficient in p53 survive and form internal masses. Together, we demonstrate that KRas-transformation alone causes cell invasion and partial dedifferentiation, independently of mass formation.

Highlights

  • Metastasis is the main cause of carcinoma-related death, yet we know little about how it initiates due to our inability to visualize stochastic invasion events

  • We found that mosaically expressing krt4:EGFP-KRasV12 in the outer epidermal layer caused cells to form masses or extrude, whereas control EGFP-CAAX expression did not (Fig. 1)

  • EGFPKRasV12 but not EGFP-CAAX cells accumulated under the basal epidermal layer, suggesting basal cell extrusion (BCE) enables invasion (Supplementary Fig. 1a and Supplementary Movie 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Metastasis is the main cause of carcinoma-related death, yet we know little about how it initiates due to our inability to visualize stochastic invasion events. EGFPKRasV12 but not EGFP-CAAX cells accumulated under the basal epidermal layer, suggesting BCE enables invasion (Supplementary Fig. 1a and Supplementary Movie 5).

Results
Conclusion
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