IMBECU   20882
INSTITUTO DE MEDICINA Y BIOLOGIA EXPERIMENTAL DE CUYO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Retinoic acid induces nuclear FAK translocation and reduces breast cancer cell adhesion through moesin, FAK, and paxillin
Autor/es:
VARGAS-ROIG LAURA MARIA; SHORTREDE JORGE; SANCHEZ ANGEL MATIAS; FLAMINI MARINA INES
Lugar:
Roma
Reunión:
Congreso; 2nd Global Insight Conference on Breast Cancer; 2017
Institución organizadora:
Innovinc
Resumen:
Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women, with metastases being the cause of death in 98%. In previous works we have demonstrated that retinoic acid (RA), the main retinoic acid receptor (RAR) ligand, is involved in the metastatic process by inhibiting migration through a reduced expression of the specific migration-related proteins Moesin, c-Src, and FAK. At present, our hypothesis is that RA also acts for short periods in a non-genomic action to cooperate with motility reduction and morphology of breast cancer cells. Here we identify that the administration of 10 6 M RA (10e20 min) induces the activation of the migration-related proteins Moesin, FAK, and Paxillin in T-47D breast cancer cells. The phosphorylation exerted by the selective agonists for RARa and RARb, on Moesin, FAK, and Paxillin was comparable to the activation exerted by RA. The RARg agonist only led to a weak activation, suggesting the involvement of RARa and RARb in this pathway. We then treated the cells with different inhibitors that are involved in cell signaling to regulate the mechanisms of cell motility. RA failed to activate Moesin, FAK, and Paxillin in cells treated with Src inhibitor (PP2) and PI3K inhibitor (WM), suggesting the participation of Src-PI3K in this pathway. Treatment with 10 6 M RA for 20 min significantly decreased cell adhesion. However, when cells were treated with 10 6 M RA and FAK inhibitor, the RA did not significantly inhibit adhesion, suggesting a role of FAK in the adhesion inhibited by RA. By immunofluorescence and immunoblotting analysis we demonstrated that RA induced nuclear FAK translocation leading to a reduced cellular adhesion. These findings provide new information on the actions of RA for short periods. RA participates in cell adhesion and subsequent migration, modulating the relocation and activation of proteins involved in cell migration.