520 likes | 1.52k Views
2. Overview . What is metastasis?Molecular mechanisms of metastasisSignalling pathways involved in metastasis. 3. I) What is cancer metastasis? . Cancer defines as a population of cells that have lost their normal controls of growth and differentiation and are proliferating without check. Metastasis is the process by which a tumor cell leaves the primary tumor, travels to a distant site via the circulatory system, and establishes a secondary tumor. .
E N D
1. 1 Molecular mechanism of cancer metastasis Dr. Yick-Pang Ching
Department of Pathology
Room L7-05, Faculty Medicine Building
Tel: 28199656
E.Mail: ypching@hkucc.hku.h
2. 2 Overview What is metastasis?
Molecular mechanisms of metastasis
Signalling pathways involved in metastasis
3. 3 I) What is cancer metastasis? Cancer defines as a population of cells that have lost their normal controls of growth and differentiation and are proliferating without check.
Metastasis is the process by which a tumor cell leaves the primary tumor, travels to a distant site via the circulatory system, and establishes a secondary tumor.
4. 4 Forms of cancer metastasis
5. 5 Preferential metastatic sites
6. 6 Reason for organ selectivity Mechanistic theory: determined by the pattern of blood flow.
“Seed and soil” theory: the provision of a fertile environment in which compatible tumor cells could grow
7. 7 Determining factors Appropriate growth factors or extracellular matrix environment
Compatible adhesion sites on the endothelial lumenal surface
Selective chemotaxis at which the organ producing some soluble attraction factors to the tumor cells
8. 8 II) Molecular mechanisms of metastasis
9. 9 5 major steps in metastasis Invasion and infiltration of surrounding normal host tissue with penetration of small lymphatic or vascular channels;
Release of neoplastic cells, either or single cells or small clumps, into the circulation;
Survival in the circulation;
Arrest in the capillary beds of distant organs;
Penetration of the lymphatic or blood vessel walls followed by growth of the disseminated tumor cells
10. 10
11. 11 Stages of metastasis Invasion : primary tumour cells enter circulation
Circulation to the secondary site of tumour growth
Colonisation : formation of secondary tumour
12. 12 Tumor invasion Translocation of cells across extracellular matrix barriers
Lysis of matrix protein by specific proteinases
Cell migration
13. 13 Components of invasion Matrix degrading enzymes
Cell adhesion
Cell motility
14. 14 a) Matrix degrading enzymes Required for a controlled degradation of components of the extracellular matrix (ECM)
The proteases involved in this process are classified into serine-, cysteine-, aspartyl-, and metalloproteinase.
15. 15 MMP family
16. 16 Matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) 16 members, subdivided into 4 groups, based on their structural characteristics and substrate specificities
Soluble and secreted groups; collagenase, gelatinase and stromelysins
Membrane type (MT-MMP) group are anchored in the plasma membrane
A zinc ion in the active centre of the protease is required for their catalytic activities.
17. 17 Regulation of MMP MMP is controlled by an increased expression on a transcriptional level.
MMPs are calcium-dependent proteases, which are synthesized as a inactive proenzymes and are activated by the cleavage of a propeptide.
MMP activity is regulated by specific inhibitors, the tissue inhibitors of MMP (TIMPs). Binding TIMP to MMP is in a 1:1 stoichiometry.
MMP2 and MMP9, which cleave type IV collagen the major constituent of basement membrane, are believed to be of special importance
18. 18 Serine proteases Serine protease involved in ECM degradation are plasmin, plasminogen activators and cathepsin G.
Plasmin is believed to be the most important serine protease, firstly because its ability to degrade several matrix components like gelatin, fibronectin or laminin, and secondly by the possible activation of numerous proforms of MMPs by propeptide cleavage.
Plasmin is synthesized in its inactive proform, plasminogen, which can be converted to plasmin by plasminogen activator.
19. 19 Plasminogen activator Two main types : urokinase (uPA) and tissue (tPA).
uPA is bound to the surface of tumor cells by means of a specific receptor (uPAR)
There are specific inhibitors (PAI-1 and PAI-2) for the PA.
20. 20 Interaction between tumour cells and the surrounding connective tissue
21. 21 Cell adhesion and metastasis
22. 22 b) Cell attachment Integrin: cell-matrix adhesion
E-cadherin/catenin adhesion complex: cell-cell adhesion
23. 23 1) Integrin Heterodimeric transmembrane receptors consists of a and b subunits
Function to provide interactions between cells and macromolecules in the ECM
Integrin can affect the transcription of MMP genes
24. 24 Integrin signaling
25. 25 2) E-cadherin and catenin complex Most important cell-cell adhesion molecules
Reduce expression of E-cadherin and catenin increase the invasiveness of tumor cells
26. 26 Cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion
27. 27 p120 catenin
28. 28
29. 29 c) Cell migration Small Rho GTPase family
Motility promoting factors
30. 30 Small Rho GTPase
31. 31 Model of Rho GTPase regulation
32. 32 Regulation of Rho GTPase
33. 33 Cell movement
34. 34 Rho GTPase is required for the transition of invasive phenotype
35. 35 Signaling pathways related to integrin and small GTPase
36. 36 E-cadherin and Rho GTPase signaling
37. 37 Rho GTPase at different stages of tumour progression
38. 38 2) Motility promoting factors Hepatocyte growth factor/scattering factor
Insulin-like growth factor II
Autotaxin
39. 39 HGF/scatting factor Heterodimer of a and b chains
HGF normally acts as a paracrine growth factor, but in tumor cells it can act as an autocrine
HGF binds to the c-Met receptor and activated the downstream effectors
40. 40 HGF induce cell scattering and invasion
41. 41 HGF induce the formation of branched tubules
42. 42 Signalling pathways responsible for MET-dependent invasive growth
43. 43 HGF/Met regulate integrin, cadherin and MMPs during invasion