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Mutant p53 promotes epithelial‐mesenchymal plasticity and enhances metastasis in mammary carcinomas of WAP‐T mice
Authors:Claudia Maenz  Christina Heinlein  Katharina Jannasch  Udo Schumacher  Klaus Pantel  Genrich V Tolstonog  Wolfgang Deppert  Florian Wegwitz
Institution:1. Department for Tumor Biology, University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf (UKE), Hamburg, Germany;2. Department of Tumor Virology, Heinrich‐Pette‐Institute, Leibniz Institute for Experimental Virology, Hamburg, Germany;3. Department Hematology and Oncology, University Medical Center G?ttingen, Germany;4. Department for Anatomy II, University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf (UKE), Hamburg, Germany;5. Department of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, University Hospital CHUV, Lausanne, Switzerland;6. Department of Translational Cancer Research, University Medical Center G?ttingen, Germany
Abstract:To study the postulated mutant p53 (mutp53) “gain of function” effects in mammary tumor development, progression and metastasis, we crossed SV40 transgenic WAP‐T mice with mutant p53 transgenic WAP‐mutp53 mice. Compared to tumors in monotransgenic WAP‐T mice, tumors in bitransgenic WAP‐T x WAP‐mutp53 mice showed higher tumor grading, enhanced vascularization, and significantly increased metastasis. Bitransgenic tumors revealed a gene signature associated with the oncogenic epithelial‐mesenchymal transition pathway (EMT gene signature). In cultures of WAP‐T tumor‐derived G‐2 cancer cells, which are comprised of subpopulations displaying “mesenchymal” and “epithelial” phenotypes, this EMT gene signature was associated with the “mesenchymal” compartment. Furthermore, ectopic expression of mutp53 in G‐2 cells sufficed to induce a strong EMT phenotype. In contrast to these in vitro effects, monotransgenic and bitransgenic tumors were phenotypically similar suggesting that in vivo the tumor cell phenotype might be under control of the tumor microenvironment. In support, orthotopic transplantation of G‐2 cells as well as of G‐2 cells expressing ectopic mutp53 into syngeneic mice resulted in tumors with a predominantly epithelial phenotype, closely similar to that of endogenous primary tumors. We conclude that induction of an EMT gene signature by mutp53 in bitransgenic tumors primarily promotes tumor cell plasticity, that is, the probability of tumor cells to undergo EMT processes under appropriate stimuli, thereby possibly increasing their potential to disseminate and metastasize.
Keywords:WAP‐T  mutp53  breast cancer  metastasis  EMT
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