Abstract

Tumor invasiveness depends on the ability of tumor cells to breach endothelial barriers. In this study, we investigated the mechanism by which the adhesion of melanoma cells to endothelium regulates adherens junction integrity and modulates tumor transendothelial migration (TEM) by initiating thrombin generation. We found that the B-Raf(V600E) mutation in metastatic melanoma cells up-regulated tissue factor (TF) expression on cell membranes and promoted thrombin production. Co-culture of endothelial monolayers with metastatic melanoma cells mediated the opening of inter-endothelial spaces near melanoma cell contact sites in the presence of platelet-free plasma (PFP). By using small interfering RNA (siRNA), we demonstrated that B-Raf(V600E) and TF silencing attenuated the focal disassembly of adherens junction induced by tumor contact. Vascular endothelial-cadherin (VE-cadherin) disassembly was dependent on phosphorylation of p120-catenin on Ser-879 and VE-cadherin on Tyr-658, Tyr-685, and Tyr-731, which can be prevented by treatment with the thrombin inhibitor, hirudin, or by silencing the thrombin receptor, protease-activated receptor-1, in endothelial cells. We also provided strong evidence that tumor-derived thrombin enhanced melanoma TEM by inducing ubiquitination-coupled VE-cadherin internalization, focal adhesion formation, and actin assembly in endothelium. Confocal microscopic analysis of tumor TEM revealed that junctions transiently opened and resealed as tumor cells accomplished TEM. In addition, in the presence of PFP, tumor cells preferentially transmigrated via paracellular routes. PFP supported melanoma transmigration under shear conditions via a B-Raf(V600E)-thrombin-dependent mechanism. We concluded that the activation of thrombin generation by cancer cells in plasma is an important process regulating melanoma extravasation by disrupting endothelial junction integrity.Background: A prothrombotic state is one of the hallmarks of advanced cancer.Results: B-Raf(V600E)-dependent thrombin release from metastatic melanoma signals focal adherens junction disassembly by triggering VE-cadherin phosphorylation and ubiquitination.Conclusion: Thrombin-mediated junction breakdown allows melanoma extravasation via a paracellular route.Significance: Targeting B-Raf(V600E)-mediated thrombin generation and endothelial barrier dysfunction may represent a novel therapeutic strategy to limit tumor metastasis.

Highlights

  • A prothrombotic state is one of the hallmarks of advanced cancer

  • Targeting Mutant B-Raf(V600E)-tissue factor (TF) Signaling in Melanoma Cells Inhibited Thrombin Generation—Melanoma harboring the B-Raf(V600E) mutation has been shown to enhance adhesion-independent growth, alter G1-S cell cycle progression, and exacerbate leukocyte-mediated metastasis (15, 16, 29 –31)

  • We postulated that the B-Raf mutation initiates downstream signaling leading to TF overexpression and TF-based thrombogenesis. small interfering RNA (siRNA) was designed and nucleofected to suppress the expression of mutant B-Raf(V600E) in melanoma cell lines

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Summary

Background

A prothrombotic state is one of the hallmarks of advanced cancer. Results: B-Raf(V600E)-dependent thrombin release from metastatic melanoma signals focal adherens junction disassembly by triggering VE-cadherin phosphorylation and ubiquitination. We investigated the mechanism by which the adhesion of melanoma cells to endothelium regulates adherens junction integrity and modulates tumor transendothelial migration (TEM) by initiating thrombin generation. We concluded that the activation of thrombin generation by cancer cells in plasma is an important process regulating melanoma extravasation by disrupting endothelial junction integrity. Tumor cell adhesion initiates a series of signaling cascades leading to the loss of endothelial junction integrity [22, 23] It is unknown whether B-Raf(V600E) overexpression in malignant melanoma cells can mediate endothelial junction breakdown by catalyzing thrombin production. The effects of knockdown and ectopic expression of B-Raf(V600E) on melanoma contact-induced endothelial junction disassembly, permeability increase, and reduction of VEcadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion were evaluated in the presence of platelet-free plasma (PFP). The roles of tumor-derived thrombin and VEcadherin junction breakdown in regulating the routes of melanoma transendothelial migration (TEM) were investigated

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