The survival and growth of tumor cells in a foreign environment is considered a rate-limiting step during metastasis. To identify genes that may be essential for this process, we isolated highly metastatic variants from a poorly metastatic human melanoma cell line and performed expression analyses of metastases and primary tumors from these cells. GPR56 is among the genes markedly down-regulated in the metastatic variants. We show that overexpression of GPR56 suppresses tumor growth and metastasis, whereas reduced expression of GPR56 enhances tumor progression. Levels of GPR56 do not correlate with growth rate in vitro, suggesting that GPR56 may mediate growth suppression by interaction with a component in the tumor microenvironment in vivo. We show that GPR56 binds specifically to tissue transglutaminase, TG2, a widespread component of tissue and tumor stroma previously implicated as an inhibitor of tumor progression. We discuss the mechanisms whereby GPR56-TG2 interactions may suppress tumor growth and metastasis.
Xu L 1,
Begum S ,
Hearn JD ,
Hynes RO
Affiliations
1 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Center For Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
The findings further our understanding of mechanisms of tumor metastasis as they enlighten another piece of the complex network that enables tumor cells to communicate with components of their site of metastasis and that comprises many players including adhesion molecules, cytokines and extracellular matrix molecules. The paper, thus, highlights the importance of research into the molecular cross-talk between tumor cells and their specific microenvironment.
These findings link the previously known association of transglutaminase 2 (TG2) expression and inhibition of tumor growth with a novel function of a G protein-coupled receptor (GPR); thus, shedding new light on the molecular cross-talk of tumor cells with components of their microenvironment. The authors describe a novel role of GPR56, an atypical GPR, for inhibition of melanoma progression and metastasis. In addition, they demonstrated that GPR56 binds to tissue transglutaminase, TG2.
Classifications
New Finding
Cite this Recommendation:
Schön M: H1 Connect Recommendation of [Xu L et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2006 103(24:9023-9028)]. In H1 Connect, 08 Nov 2006;