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Lysophosphatidic Acid Disrupts Junctional Integrity and Epithelial Cohesion in Ovarian Cancer Cells.

journal contribution
posted on 2022-09-28, 00:00 authored by Jaime Symowicz, Kim Chaffin, Sharon StackSharon Stack, Rebecca Burkhalter, Shawn Ellerbroek, Yueying LiuYueying Liu
Ovarian cancer metastasizes via exfoliation of free-floating cells and multicellular aggregates from the primary tumor to the peritoneal cavity. A key event in EOC metastasis is disruption of cell-cell contacts via modulation of intercellular junctional components including cadherins. Ascites is rich in lysophosphatidic acid (LPA),a bioactive lipid that may promote early events in ovarian cancer dissemination. The objective of this paper was to assess the effect of LPA on E-cadherin junctional integrity. We report a loss of junctional E-cadherin in OVCAR3,OVCA429,and OVCA433 cells exposed to LPA. LPA-induced loss of E-cadherin was concentration and time dependent. LPA increased MMP-9 expression and promoted MMP-9-catalyzed E-cadherin ectodomain shedding. Blocking LPA receptor signaling inhibited MMP-9 expression and restored junctional E-cadherin staining. LPA-treated cells demonstrated a significant decrease in epithelial cohesion. Together these data support a model wherein LPA induces MMP-9 expression and MMP-9-catalyzed E-cadherin ectodomain shedding,resulting in loss of E-cadherin junctional integrity and epithelial cohesion,facilitating metastatic dissemination of ovarian cancer cells.

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Date Modified

2022-09-29

Language

  • English

Publisher

Journal of Oncology

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    Harper Cancer Research Institute

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