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Status |
Public on Jun 22, 2015 |
Title |
Mutational activation of a mechanosensitive megachannel drives metastatic cell survival. |
Organism |
Homo sapiens |
Experiment type |
Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
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Summary |
Next-generation sequencing has revolutionized cancer biology by accelerating the unbiased discovery of novel mutations across human cancers. Transforming such discoveries into a conceptual framework of cancer progression requires narrowing the vast number of mutations down to the driver elements, and further reducing these to mutations that govern cancer progression as opposed to tumor initiation. By integrating next-generation RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) with in vivo selection, we devise an approach that identifies a series of novel recurrent non-synonymous amino acid mutations that are enriched in metastatic breast cancer cells and predicted to significantly alter protein function. These mutations, found in PANX1, RBFA, REST, KRIT1 and ZSWIM6, are detected at higher frequencies in the transcriptomes of two patients’ highly metastatic sub-lines relative to their poorly metastatic parental lines. We functionally characterize the cellular and molecular roles of one of these mutations—a nonsense alteration that yields a truncated pannexin-1 (PANX11-89) plasma membrane megachannel subunit—in metastatic progression. PANX11-89 interacts with full-length PANX1 and augments PANX1 channel activity to promote the survival of cancer cells as they are mechanically deformed. Protection from deformation-induced cell death requires PANX1 channels to release ATP, which acts as a cell autonomous survival signal during mechanical stress. Functional characterization of additional nonsense and missense PANX1 mutations detected in epithelial cancers of the colon, lung, and prostate reveals that these mutants also enhance PANX1-mediated ATP release. In vivo testing of one such truncating mutation detected in a metastatic colorectal tumor also enhances early survival, dissemination and liver metastatic colonization by human colon cancer cells. Finally, pharmacological inhibition of PANX1 inhibits breast cancer metastasis, implicating PANX1 as a novel therapeutic target in cancer. Our findings reveal that ATP release through mechanosensitive PANX1 channels enables cancer cells to overcome a major metastasis suppressive barrier—deformation-induced death in the microvasculature.
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Overall design |
To systematically identify base-pair mutations present in metastatic cells that may drive cancer progression, we performed whole-transcriptome RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) of in vivo-selected, highly metastatic human breast cancer cell sub-lines, CN-LM1A and MDA-LM2, as well as the CN34 and MDA-MB-231 parental lines from which they were derived. To minimize the false positive rate and allow for subsequent statistical analysis, we sequenced biological replicates of each cell line. Mutations conferring enhanced metastatic capacity should be enriched in the transcriptomes of highly metastatic cells relative to their less metastatic parental populations.
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Contributor(s) |
Furlow PW, Soong D, Zhang S, Halberg N, Mangrum C, Elemento O, Tavazoie SF |
Citation(s) |
26098574 |
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Submission date |
Mar 14, 2013 |
Last update date |
May 15, 2019 |
Contact name |
David Soong |
Organization name |
Weill Cornell Medical College
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Department |
Institute for Computational Biomedicine
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Street address |
1305 York Avenue
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City |
New York |
State/province |
NY |
ZIP/Postal code |
10021 |
Country |
USA |
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Platforms (1) |
GPL10999 |
Illumina Genome Analyzer IIx (Homo sapiens) |
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Samples (8)
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Relations |
BioProject |
PRJNA193090 |
SRA |
SRP019275 |
Supplementary file |
Size |
Download |
File type/resource |
GSE45162_SNV_tables.xlsx.gz |
62.7 Mb |
(ftp)(http) |
XLSX |
SRA Run Selector |
Raw data are available in SRA |
Processed data are available on Series record |
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