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Rebalancing of actomyosin contractility enables mammary tumor formation upon loss of E-cadherin.

Koen Schipper ,
Danielle Seinstra ,
Anne Paulien Drenth ,
Eline van der Burg ,
Veronika Ramovs ,
Arnoud Sonnenberg ,
Jacco van Rheenen ,
Micha Nethe ,
Jos Jonkers

Abstract

E-cadherin (CDH1) is a master regulator of epithelial cell adherence junctions and a well-established tumor suppressor in Invasive Lobular Carcinoma (ILC). Intriguingly, somatic inactivation of E-cadherin alone in mouse mammary epithelial cells (MMECs) is insufficient to induce tumor formation. Here we show that E-cadherin loss induces extrusion of luminal MMECs to the basal lamina. Remarkably, E-cadherin-deficient MMECs can breach the basal lamina but do not disseminate into the surrounding fat pad. Basal lamina components laminin and collagen IV supported adhesion and survival of E-cadherin-deficient MMECs while collagen I, the principle component of the mammary stromal micro-environment did not. We uncovered that relaxation of actomyosin contractility mediates adhesion and survival of E-cadherin-deficient MMECs on collagen I, thereby allowing ILC development. Together, these findings unmask the direct consequences of E-cadherin inactivation in the mammary gland and identify aberrant actomyosin contractility as a critical barrier to ILC formation.

More about this publication

Nature communications

Volume 10
Issue nr. 1
Pages 3800
Publication date 23-08-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41467-019-11716-6
Europe PubMed Central 31444332
Pubmed 31444332

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