Abstract

Previously, we reported that high PKCK2 activity could protect cancer cells from death receptor-mediated apoptosis through phosphorylation of procaspase-2. Because anoikis is another form of apoptosis, we asked whether PKCK2 could similarly confer resistance to anoikis on cancer cells. Human esophageal squamous cancer cell lines with high PKCK2 activity (HCE4 and HCE7) were anoikis-resistant, whereas cell lines with low PKCK2 activity (TE2 and TE3) were anoikis-sensitive. Because the cells showed different sensitivity to anoikis, we compared the expression of cell adhesion molecules between anoikis-sensitive TE2 and anoikis-resistant HCE4 cells using cDNA microarray. We found that E-cadherin is expressed only in TE2 cells; whereas N-cadherin is expressed instead of E-cadherin in HCE4 cells. To examine whether PKCK2 activity could determine the type of cadherin expressed, we first increased intracellular PKCK2 activity in TE2 cells by overexpressing the PKCK2α catalytic subunit using lentivirus and found that high PKCK2 activity could switch cadherin expression from type E to N and confer anoikis resistance. Conversely, a decrease in PKCK2 activity in HCE4 cells by knockdown of PKCK2α catalytic subunit using shRNA induced N- to E-cadherin switching and the anoikis-resistant cells became sensitive. In addition, N-cadherin expression correlated with PKB/Akt activation and increased invasiveness. We conclude that high intracellular PKCK2 activity confers anoikis resistance on esophageal cancer cells by inducing E- to N-cadherin switching.

Highlights

  • Six essential alterations in cell physiology can result in malignant growth of cancer cells

  • Endogenous PKCK2 activity and anoikis To examine whether intracellular PKCK2 activity is a determinant of anoikis resistance, esophageal cancer cell lines that show high (HCE4 and HCE7) or low (TE2 and TE3) PKCK2 activity [21] were cultured on poly-HEMA coated tissue culture plates

  • These results suggest that PKCK2 activity might be a determinant of anoikis resistance

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Summary

Introduction

Six essential alterations in cell physiology can result in malignant growth of cancer cells. These are described as "the hallmarks of cancer" [1] and include: (i) sustaining proliferative signaling, (ii) evading growth suppressors, (iii) resisting cell death, (iv) enabling replicative immortality, (v) inducing angiogenesis, and (vi) activating invasion and metastasis [1]. The sequential steps in the pathogenesis of cancer metastasis include vascularization, inva-. Authors' Affiliations: 1Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Yonsei University College of Medicine; 2Brain Korea 21 Project for Medical Science of Yonsei University; 3Department of Oral Pathology; 4Oral Cancer Research Institute, Yonsei University College of Dentistry, 50 Yonsei-ro, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, Korea. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Research Online (http://mcr.aacrjournals.org/). Kim are co-first authors and contributed to this article

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