Epidermal growth factor receptor plays a significant role in hepatocyte growth factor mediated biological responses in mammary epithelial cells.

Alyssa R Bonine-Summers, Mary E Aakre, Kimberly A Brown, Carlos L Arteaga, Jennifer A Pietenpol, Harold L Moses, Nikki Cheng

Department of Cancer Biology, Vanderbilt-lngram Cancer Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-6838, USA.

Journal Article: Cancer biology & therapy (impact factor: 2.71). 05/2007; 6(4):561-70.

Abstract

Breast cancers often have deregulated hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and c-Met signaling that results in increased tumor growth and invasion. Elucidating the mechanism responsible for HGF/c-Met action in breast cancer progression has been difficult as c-Met communicates with a number of secondary receptors that can lead to various pathological outcomes. Understanding how these secondary receptors facilitate HGF/c-Met cellular responses will aid in the development of better therapeutic treatment options for breast cancer patients with elevated HGF signaling. In the present study it was shown that the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) plays a significant role in HGF/c-Met mediated biological activities indicative of advanced tumor pathology, including enhanced proliferation and invasion. The clinically relevant EGFR inhibitor gefitinib was used to determine the role of EGFR in HGF-induced proliferation and motility in several mammary carcinoma cells including PyVmT, MDA-MB-231 and 4T1. Our analyses indicated that EGFR inhibition significantly blocked HGF activation of c-Met and EGFR and that inhibition of these pathways mitigated HGF induced proliferation and motility. The data indicate that this inhibition was not through a direct effect of gefitinib on c-Met, but that EGFR is necessary for c-Met activation in the assays performed. These results provide a novel mechanism of action for EGFR as a mediator of HGF signaling thereby linking EGFR to the oncogenic potential of c-Met in mammary carcinomas cells.

Source: PubMed

Comments on this publication

ResearchGate members can add comments. Sign up now and post your comment!

Similar publications

Science & Research Jobs

Keywords

biological activities indicative
 
breast cancer patients
 
breast cancer progression
 
Breast cancers
 
c-Met activation
 
c-Met signaling
 
clinically relevant EGFR inhibitor gefitinib
 
EGFR inhibition
 
epidermal growth factor receptor
 
HGF activation
 
HGF signaling
 
HGF-induced proliferation
 
HGF/c-Met
 
HGF/c-Met action
 
HGF/c-Met cellular responses
 
mammary carcinoma cells
 
mammary carcinomas cells
 
mechanism responsible
 
therapeutic treatment options
 
various pathological outcomes