Abstract

Lysyl oxidase-like 2 (LOXL2), a copper-dependent enzyme of the lysyl oxidase family and its nonsecreted, catalytically dead spliced isoform L2Δ13, enhance cell migration and invasion, stimulate filopodia formation, modulate the expression of cytoskeletal genes, and promote tumor development and metastasis in vivo. We previously showed that LOXL2 reorganizes the actin cytoskeleton in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) cells, however, the underlying molecular mechanisms were not identified. Here, using interactome analysis, we identified ezrin (EZR), fascin (FSCN1), heat shock protein beta-1 (HSPB1), and tropomodulin-3 (TMOD3) as actin-binding proteins that associate with cytoplasmic LOXL2, as well as with its L2Δ13 variant. High levels of LOXL2 and L2Δ13 and their cytoskeletal partners correlated with poor clinical outcome in patients with ESCC. To better understand the significance of these interactions, we focused on the interaction of LOXL2 with ezrin. Phosphorylation of ezrin at T567 was greatly reduced following depletion of LOXL2 and was enhanced following LOXL2/L2Δ13 reexpression. Furthermore, LOXL2 depletion inhibited the ability of ezrin to promote tumor progression. These results suggest that LOXL2-induced ezrin phosphorylation, which also requires PKCα, is critical for LOXL2-induced cytoskeletal reorganization that subsequently promotes tumor cell invasion and metastasis in ESCC. In summary, we have characterized a novel molecular mechanism that mediates, in part, the protumorigenic activity of LOXL2. These findings may enable the future development of therapeutic agents targeting cytoplasmic LOXL2. SIGNIFICANCE: LOXL2 and its spliced isoform L2Δ13 promote cytoskeletal reorganization and invasion of esophageal cancer cells by interacting with cytoplasmic actin-binding proteins such as ezrin.

Highlights

  • Lysyl oxidase-like 2 (LOXL2) is a secreted copper-dependent enzyme of the lysyl oxidase family that contains five members (LOX and LOXL1–4)

  • High level expression of L2D13 was correlated with tumor invasion as well as lymph node metastasis (Supplementary Table S1) and predicted a higher mortality risk than low level expression of L2D13 (Supplementary Table S3), implying that L2D13 plays an essential role in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) tumor progression

  • We further showed that the interaction of LOXL2 with one of these proteins, ezrin, promotes the phosphorylation of ezrin, which, in turn, results in enhanced invasion and metastasis of ESCC cells, and is linked in turn to worse prognosis of patients with ESCC

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lysyl oxidase-like 2 (LOXL2) is a secreted copper-dependent enzyme of the lysyl oxidase family that contains five members (LOX and LOXL1–4). Aberrant expression of LOXL2 has been reported in a range of diseases [2, 3] and in several types of cancer, including breast cancer and squamous cell carcinomas [4,5,6]. LOXL2 oxidizes methylated TAF10 to regulate TFIID-dependent gene expression during neural progenitor differentiation [10]. Cytoplasmic- and perinuclearlocalized LOXL2 is associated with poor prognosis and metastasis of some tumor types, including breast cancer [11] and laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma [8]. It is unclear how cytoplasmically localized LOXL2 promotes tumor progression and what genes are involved

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call