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Downregulation of glypican-4 facilitates breast cancer progression by inducing cell migration and proliferation

Authors
Munir, JavariaTrinh Van NguAyudthaya, Penchatr Diskul NaRyu, Seongho
Issue Date
21-May-2020
Publisher
Academic Press
Keywords
Breast cancer; Proliferation; Invasion; Migration; Glypican-4; Tumor suppressor
Citation
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, v.526, no.1, pp 91 - 97
Pages
7
Journal Title
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
Volume
526
Number
1
Start Page
91
End Page
97
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/2822
DOI
10.1016/j.bbrc.2020.03.064
ISSN
0006-291X
1090-2104
Abstract
Glypican-4 (GPC-4) is a heparan sulphate glycoprotein, associated with cell membrane via a Glycosyl phosphatidyl (GPI)-anchor. It is involved in cell migration, cell growth, differentiation and morphogenesis as well as chemoresistance and cancer stem cell maintenance in pancreatic cancer. However, its role in breast cancer remains unclear. To elucidate the role of GPC-4 in breast cancer, we analyzed GPC-4 expression in breast cancer patients and breast cancer cell lines. Our results demonstrated that GPC-4 expression was downregulated in metastatic tumors as compared to non-metastatic tumors. Further, GPC4's downregulation was confirmed in breast cancer metastatic cells (MDA-MBA-231 and MDA-MB-LM2) compared to non-metastatic cells (T47-D and MCF-7) with quantitative PCR and western blot. Knock-down of GPC-4 in non-metastatic cells significantly increased cell-migration and invasion. Similarly, over-expressing GPC-4 in metastatic cells decreased cell-migration/invasion and cell proliferation. Additionally, GPC-4 overexpression decreased in-vivo tumorigenicity in nude mice. Therefore, this research for the first time, has established the role of glypican-4 as a tumor-suppressor in breast cancer by decreasing migration and proliferation, revealing it as a possible therapy for breast cancer. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.
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