Abstract

During metastasis, cancer cells can invade extracellular matrix (ECM) through a process mediated by matrix-degrading protrusions of the plasma membrane, termed invadopodia. Formation of invadopodia correlates with cells’ invasive and metastatic potential, and thus presents a potential target for therapeutic approaches to target metastatic progression. Invadopodia formation is dependent on the recruitment of proteins involved in intracellular signaling, actin cytoskeleton remodeling, and proteolytic matrix modification. The latter includes matrix degrading enzymes such as MT1-MMP, MMP2, and MMP9. These essential invadopodium-associated enzymes are required for localized matrix degradation, and their localization at invadopodia is central to invadopodium-based cancer cell invasion. Soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptors (SNAREs) facilitate intracellular vesicle traffic, including that involved in the transport of invadopodium-associated proteins, and in so doing promote modification of ECM and modulation of signaling pathways involved in the movement of cancer cells. Specific SNARE complexes have been found to support invadopodia formation, and these complexes are, in turn, regulated by associated proteins that interact specifically with SNAREs. Targeting SNARE regulatory proteins thus provides a possible approach to disrupt SNARE-dependent delivery of invadopodial proteins, including MT1-MMP, to sites of ECM modification. Here, we review recent studies of SNARE regulators that hold potential as targets for the development of anti-metastatic therapies for patients burdened with invadopodia-forming cancer types.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Molecular and Cellular Oncology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Oncology

  • Beyond Munc18c, gelsolin, supervillin, and cdc42, other sensitive factor attachment protein receptors (SNAREs) regulatory proteins have yet to be described in the context of invadopodia biology

  • Several members of the SNARE family have been identified that mediate the fusion of vesicles containing invadopodial proteins (e.g. MT1-MMP, Src, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)) to the plasma membrane

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Summary

INVADOPODIA AND METASTATIC PROGRESSION

Metastatic progression is one of the most clinically challenging aspects of cancer, contributing to significant mortality [1]. Membrane trafficking pathways, involving SNAREs SNAP23 and Syntaxin, have been shown to contribute to invadopodium formation through the delivery of EGFR and b1 integrin to the cell membrane [21]. This trafficking pathway delivers Src kinase, in association with EGFR and b1 integrin, to these sites [21]. VAMP3 and syntaxin were found to be involved in the secretion of MMP2 and MMP9 during ECM remodeling in invasive cancer cells [20] These studies reveal that several, possibly overlapping, SNAREmediated membrane trafficking pathways contribute to invadopodium formation and function, and how these pathways are interconnected and coordinated is an area of active investigation

REGULATION OF SNARE FUNCTION AS A THERAPEUTIC TARGET
GELSOLIN AND SUPERVILLIN
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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