Constitutive Protease-activated Receptor-2-mediated Migration of MDA MB-231 Breast Cancer Cells Requires Both β-Arrestin-1 and -2
pmid: 15489220
Constitutive Protease-activated Receptor-2-mediated Migration of MDA MB-231 Breast Cancer Cells Requires Both β-Arrestin-1 and -2
Protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2) is activated by trypsin-like serine proteases and can promote cell migration through an ERK1/2-dependent pathway, involving formation of a scaffolding complex at the leading edge of the cell. Previous studies also showed that expression of a dominant negative fragment of beta-arrestin-1 reduces PAR-2-stimulated internalization, ERK1/2 activation, and cell migration; however, this reagent may block association of many proteins, including beta-arrestin-2 with clathrin-coated pits. Here we investigate the role of PAR-2 in the constitutive migration of a metastatic breast cancer cell line, MDA MB-231, and use small interfering RNA to determine the contribution of each beta-arrestin to this process. We demonstrate that a trypsin-like protease secreted from MDA MB-231 cells can promote cell migration through autocrine activation of PAR-2 and this correlates with constitutive localization of PAR-2, beta-arrestin-2, and activated ERK1/2 to pseudopodia. Addition of MEK-1 inhibitors, trypsin inhibitors, a scrambled PAR-2 peptide, and silencing of beta-arrestins with small interfering RNA also reduce base-line migration of MDA MB-231 cells. In contrast, a less metastatic PAR-2 expressing breast cancer cell line does not exhibit constitutive migration, pseudopodia formation, or trypsin secretion; in these cells PAR-2 is more uniformly distributed around the cell periphery. These data demonstrate a requirement for both beta-arrestins in PAR-2-mediated motility and suggest that autocrine activation of PAR-2 by secreted proteases may contribute to the migration of metastatic tumor cells through beta-arrestin-dependent ERK1/2 activation.
- University of California System United States
- Duke University Medical Center United States
- University of California, Riverside United States
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute United States
- Duke University Health System United States
Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 1, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 3, Time Factors, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Arrestins, Chemotaxis, Blotting, Western, Cell Membrane, Breast Neoplasms, Endosomes, Clathrin, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Cell Movement, Cell Line, Tumor, Humans, Receptor, PAR-2, Pseudopodia, Neoplasm Metastasis, RNA, Small Interfering, Subcellular Fractions
Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 1, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 3, Time Factors, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Arrestins, Chemotaxis, Blotting, Western, Cell Membrane, Breast Neoplasms, Endosomes, Clathrin, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Cell Movement, Cell Line, Tumor, Humans, Receptor, PAR-2, Pseudopodia, Neoplasm Metastasis, RNA, Small Interfering, Subcellular Fractions
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