Mitochondrial dysfunction and reactive oxygen species imbalance promote breast cancer cell motility through a CXCL14-mediated mechanism

H Pelicano, W Lu, Y Zhou, W Zhang, Z Chen, Y Hu… - Cancer research, 2009 - AACR
H Pelicano, W Lu, Y Zhou, W Zhang, Z Chen, Y Hu, P Huang
Cancer research, 2009AACR
Although mitochondrial dysfunction and reactive oxygen species (ROS) stress have long
been observed in cancer cells, their role in promoting malignant cell behavior remains
unclear. Here, we show that perturbation of the mitochondrial respiratory chain in breast
cancer cells leads to a generation of subclones of cells with increased ROS, active
proliferation, high cellular motility, and invasive behaviors in vitro and in vivo. Gene
expression analysis using microarrays revealed that all subclones overexpressed CXCL14 …
Abstract
Although mitochondrial dysfunction and reactive oxygen species (ROS) stress have long been observed in cancer cells, their role in promoting malignant cell behavior remains unclear. Here, we show that perturbation of the mitochondrial respiratory chain in breast cancer cells leads to a generation of subclones of cells with increased ROS, active proliferation, high cellular motility, and invasive behaviors in vitro and in vivo. Gene expression analysis using microarrays revealed that all subclones overexpressed CXCL14, a novel chemokine with undefined function. We further show that CXCL14 expression is up-regulated by ROS through the activator protein-1 signaling pathway and promotes cell motility through elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ by binding to the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor on the endoplasmic reticulum. Abrogation of CXCL14 expression using a decoy approach suppressed cell motility and invasion. Our data suggest that mitochondrial dysfunction and ROS stress promote cancer cell motility through a novel pathway mediated by CXCL14. [Cancer Res 2009;69(6):2375–83]
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