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NANOG signaling promotes metastatic capability of immunoedited tumor cells

Authors
Lee, Hyo-JungNoh, Kyung HeeLee, Young-HoSong, Kwon-HoOh, Se JinKim, So YounKim, Tae Woo
Issue Date
Jun-2015
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
NANOG; Metastasis; EMT; Immunoedited cancer
Citation
CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS, v.32, no.5, pp.429 - 439
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS
Volume
32
Number
5
Start Page
429
End Page
439
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/93448
DOI
10.1007/s10585-015-9717-2
ISSN
0262-0898
Abstract
Metastatic recurrence after cancer treatments with radiation, cancer drugs, or even immunotherapeutic agents (cytokine, antibody, lymphocyte etc.) is often intractable and fatal for cancer patients. Therefore, molecular understanding of metastatic recurrence is necessary. Recently, these recurrent and metastatic tumor cells with resistance to cancer drugs have been reported to possess stem-like attributes and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) phenotype. Previously, we also found that antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated immunotherapy conferred tumor cells with immune-resistant and stem-like phenotypes by hyper-activating NANOG/TCL1/AKT signaling axis. In this study, we report that these immunoedited cells have high metastatic capability and phenotypes. These cells exhibit enhanced migration, infiltration, and invasiveness in vitro as well as formation of metastatic lung nodules in vivo. Moreover, they display EMT-like features characterized by increased expression of BMI1 and TWIST1. Importantly, these pleiotropic phenotypes of metastasis through the expression of the EMT-associated molecules were critically dependent on the NANOG/TCL1A/AKT signaling axis, which was also conserved across multiple types of human cancer. Thus, we provide proof of the principle that inhibition of the NANOG axis is an effective strategy to control metastasis of immunoedited cancer, particularly, after CTL-based immunotherapy.
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