Real-time sensing of MAPK signaling in medulloblastoma cells reveals cellular evasion mechanism counteracting dasatinib blockade of ERK activation during invasion
•Growth factor signaling causes sustained nuclear ERK1/2 activation.•The SCR and BCR/ABL inhibitor dasatinib blocks ERK1/2 and represses cell invasion.•EGF-stimulated cells may escape dasatinib inhibition of invasion through mesenchymal to amoeboid transition.•Combined inhibition of SRC and Rho-kina...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neoplasia (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2020-10, Vol.22 (10), p.470-483 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Growth factor signaling causes sustained nuclear ERK1/2 activation.•The SCR and BCR/ABL inhibitor dasatinib blocks ERK1/2 and represses cell invasion.•EGF-stimulated cells may escape dasatinib inhibition of invasion through mesenchymal to amoeboid transition.•Combined inhibition of SRC and Rho-kinase signaling is necessary to completely block EGF-induced invasion.
Aberrantly activated kinase signaling pathways drive invasion and dissemination in medulloblastoma (MB). A majority of tumor-promoting kinase signaling pathways feed into the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) extracellular regulated kinase (ERK1/2) pathway. The activation status of ERK1/2 during invasion of MB cells is not known and its implication in invasion control unclear.
We established a synthetic kinase activation relocation sensor (SKARS) for the MAPK ERK1/2 pathway in MB cells for real-time measuring of drug response. We used 3D invasion assays and organotypic cerebellum slice culture to test drug effects in a physiologically relevant tissue environment.
We found that hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), epidermal growth factor (EGF), or basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) caused rapid nuclear ERK1/2 activation in MB cells, which persisted for several hours. Concomitant treatment with the BCR/ABL kinase inhibitor dasatinib completely repressed nuclear ERK1/2 activity induced by HGF and EGF but not by bFGF. Increased nuclear ERK1/2 activity correlated positively with speed of invasion. Dasatinib blocked ERK-associated invasion in the majority of cells, but we also observed fast-invading cells with low ERK1/2 activity. These ERK1/2-low, fast-moving cells displayed a rounded morphology, while ERK-high fast-moving cells displayed a mesenchymal morphology. Dasatinib effectively blocked EGF-induced proliferation while it only moderately repressed tissue invasion, indicating that a subset of cells may evade invasion repression by dasatinib through non-mesenchymal motility. Thus, growth factor-induced nuclear activation of ERK1/2 is associated with mesenchymal motility and proliferation in MB cells and can be blocked with the BCR/ABL kinase inhibitor dasatinib. |
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ISSN: | 1476-5586 1522-8002 1476-5586 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neo.2020.07.006 |