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1.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer in males and second in females worldwide. Unfortunately 40-50% of patients already have metastatic disease at presentation when prognosis is poor with a 5-year survival of <10%. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been proposed to play a crucial role in tumor metastasis. We now show that higher levels of ROS accumulation are found in a colorectal cancer-derived metastatic cell line (SW620) compared with a cell line (SW480) derived from the primary lesion from the same patient. In addition, ROS accumulation can affect both the migratory and invasive capacity of SW480 and SW620 cells. To explore the molecular mechanism underlying ROS-induced migration and invasion in CRC, we have compared protein expression patterns between SW480 and SW620 cells using a two-dimensional electrophoresis-based proteomics strategy. A total of 63 altered proteins were identified from tandem MS analysis. Cluster analysis revealed dysregulated expression of multiple redox regulative or ROS responsive proteins, implicating their functional roles in colorectal cancer metastasis. Molecular and pathological validation demonstrated that altered expression of PGAM1, GRB2, DJ-1, ITGB3, SOD-1, and STMN1 was closely correlated with the metastatic potential of CRC. Functional studies showed that ROS markedly up-regulated expression of ITGB3, which in turn promoted an aggressive phenotype in SW480 cells, with concomitant up-regulated expression of STMN1. In contrast, knockdown of ITGB3 expression could mitigate the migratory and invasive potential of SW620 or H(2)O(2)-treated SW480 cells, accompanied by down-regulated expression of STMN1. The function of ITGB3 was dependent on the surface expression of integrin αvβ3 heterodimer. Furthermore, STMN1 expression and the PI3K-Akt-mTOR pathway were found to be involved in ROS-induced and ITGB3-mediated migration and invasion of colorectal cancer cells. Taken together, these studies suggest that ITGB3 plays an important role in ROS-induced migration and invasion in CRC.  相似文献   

2.
Extracellular vesicles comprise two main classes - exosomes and shed microvesicles (sMVs). Whilst much is known about exosome cargo content and functionality, sMVs are poorly understood. Here, we describe the large-scale purification of sMVs released from primary (SW480) and metastatic (SW620) human isogenic colorectal cancer (CRC) cell lines using a combination of differential ultracentrifugation and isopycnic iodixanol density centrifugation. The yield of SW480-sMVs and SW620-sMVs was 0.75 mg and 0.80 mg, respectively. Both SW480-/SW620-sMVs are heterogeneous in size (100–600 nm diameter) and exhibit identical buoyant densities (1.10 g/mL). In contrast to exosomes, sMVs are ALIX, TSG101, CD63 and CD9. Quantitative mass spectrometry identified 1295 and 1300 proteins in SW480-sMVs and SW620-sMVs, respectively. Gene Ontology enrichment analysis identified ‘cell adhesion’ (CDH1, OCLN, CTN families), ‘signalling pathway’ (KRAS, NRAS, MAPK1, MAP2K1), and ‘translation/RNA related’ processes (EIF, RPL, HNRNP families) in both sMV types. Strikingly, SW480- and SW620-sMVs exhibit distinct protein signatures - SW480-sMVs being enriched in ITGA/B, ANXA1, CLDN7, CD44 and EGFR/NOTCH signalling networks, while SW620-sMVs are enriched in PRKCA, MACC1, FGFR4 and MTOR/MARCKS signalling networks. Both SW480- and SW620-sMVs are taken up by NIH3T3 fibroblasts resulting in similar cell invasion capability. This study provides, for the first time, molecular insights into sMVs and CRC biology.  相似文献   

3.
Cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are a heterogeneous population of activated fibroblasts that constitute a dominant cellular component of the tumor microenvironment (TME) performing distinct functions. Here, the role of tumor‐derived exosomes (Exos) in activating quiescent fibroblasts into distinct functional subtypes is investigated. Proteomic profiling and functional dissection reveal that early‐ (SW480) and late‐stage (SW620) colorectal cancer (CRC) cell‐derived Exos both activated normal quiescent fibroblasts (α‐SMA?, CAV+, FAP+, VIM+) into CAF‐like fibroblasts (α‐SMA+, CAV?, FAP+, VIM+). Fibroblasts activated by early‐stage cancer‐exosomes (SW480‐Exos) are highly pro‐proliferative and pro‐angiogenic and display elevated expression of pro‐angiogenic (IL8, RAB10, NDRG1) and pro‐proliferative (SA1008, FFPS) proteins. In contrast, fibroblasts activated by late‐stage cancer‐exosomes (SW620‐Exos) display a striking ability to invade through extracellular matrix through upregulation of pro‐invasive regulators of membrane protrusion (PDLIM1, MYO1B) and matrix‐remodeling proteins (MMP11, EMMPRIN, ADAM10). Conserved features of Exos‐mediated fibroblast activation include enhanced ECM secretion (COL1A1, Tenascin‐C/X), oncogenic transformation, and metabolic reprogramming (downregulation of CAV‐1, upregulation of glycogen metabolism (GAA), amino acid biosynthesis (SHMT2, IDH2) and membrane transporters of glucose (GLUT1), lactate (MCT4), and amino acids (SLC1A5/3A5)). This study highlights the role of primary and metastatic CRC tumor‐derived Exos in generating phenotypically and functionally distinct subsets of CAFs that may facilitate tumor progression.  相似文献   

4.
Exosomes are extracellular membrane vesicles of 50- to 130-nm diameter secreted by most tumor cells. Exosomes can mediate the intercellular transfer of proteins and RNAs, including microRNAs (miRNAs), and promote both tumorigenesis and premetastatic niche formation. In this study, we performed exosomal RNA sequencing to identify candidate exosomal miRNAs that could be associated with colorectal cancer (CRC) and its distant metastasis. The expression profiles of exosomal miRNA, as secreted by isogenic human primary CRC cell line SW480 and highly metastatic cell line SW620, were analyzed and the potential targets related to tumorigenesis and metastatic progression were investigated. We found that 25 miRNAs had been up-regulated and 5 miRNAs had been down-regulated in exosomes purified from SW620 culture supernatant. Candidate miRNAs were further evaluated for CRC diagnosis using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in CRC patients. Higher expression levels of circulating exosomal miR-17-5p and miR-92a-3p were significantly associated with pathologic stages and grades of the CRC patients. CONCLUSIONS: Circulating exosomal miR-17-5p and miR-92a-3p may provide a promising noninvasive prognostic biomarker for primary and metastatic CRC.  相似文献   

5.
Fatty acid binding protein 4 (FABP4) is a novel tumor regulator that is abnormally expressed in many human cancers. In our study, upregulated microRNA-211 (miR-211) and reduced FABP4 expression were detected in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients and CRC cells. Mimic miR-211 or anti-miR-211 were transfected to investigate the effects of miR-211 on SW480 cells. The results showed that miR-211 promoted but anti-miR-211 inhibited cell migration, invasion, and epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) of SW480 cells. Luciferase activity was decreased after cotransfection with miR-211 and WT-FABP4-UTR in SW480 cells. And reduced FABP4 protein expression by miR-211 indicated that FABP4 was the targeted gene of miR-211. miR-211 inhibited the activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) γ, whereas overexpression of FABP4 reversed that effect. Finally, FABP4 inhibited the migration, invasion, and EMT of SW480 cells, whereas PPARγ agonist reversed the effects of FABP4. Thus, the miR-211/FABP4/PPARγ axis may be a novel target for CRC therapy.  相似文献   

6.
Beta(1) integrins play a crucial role in supporting tumor cell attachment to and invasion into the extracellular matrix. Endotoxin/LPS introduced by surgery has been shown to enhance tumor metastasis in a murine model. Here we show the direct effect of LPS on tumor cell adhesion and invasion in extracellular matrix proteins through a beta(1) integrin-dependent pathway. The human colorectal tumor cell lines SW480 and SW620 constitutively expressed high levels of the beta(1) subunit, whereas various low levels of alpha(1), alpha(2), alpha(4), and alpha(6) expression were detected. SW480 and SW620 did not express membrane-bound CD14; however, LPS in the presence of soluble CD14 (sCD14) significantly up-regulated beta(1) integrin expression; enhanced tumor cell attachment to fibronectin, collagen I, and laminin; and strongly promoted tumor cell invasion through the Matrigel. Anti-beta(1) blocking mAbs (4B4 and 6S6) abrogated LPS- plus sCD14-induced tumor cell adhesion and invasion. Furthermore, LPS, when combined with sCD14, resulted in NF-kappaB activation in both SW480 and SW620 cells. Inhibition of the NF-kappaB pathway significantly attenuated LPS-induced up-regulation of beta(1) integrin expression and prevented tumor cell adhesion and invasion. These results provide direct evidence that although SW480 and SW620 cells do not express membrane-bound CD14, LPS in the presence of sCD14 can activate NF-kappaB, up-regulate beta(1) integrin expression, and subsequently promote tumor cell adhesion and invasion. Moreover, LPS-induced tumor cell attachment to and invasion through extracellular matrix proteins is beta(1) subunit-dependent.  相似文献   

7.
In localized tumors, basement membrane (BM) prevents invasive outgrowth of tumor cells into surrounding tissues. When carcinomas become invasive, cancer cells either degrade BM or reprogram stromal fibroblasts to breach BM barrier and lead invasion of cancer cells into surrounding tissues in a process called fibroblast‐led invasion. However, tumor‐derived factors orchestrating fibroblast‐led invasion remain poorly understood. Here it is shown that although early‐stage primary colorectal adenocarcinoma (SW480) cells are themselves unable to invade Matrigel matrix, they secrete exosomes that reprogram normal fibroblasts to acquire de novo capacity to invade matrix and lead invasion of SW480 cells. Strikingly, cancer cells follow leading fibroblasts as collective epithelial‐clusters, thereby circumventing need for epithelial to mesenchymal transition, a key event associated with invasion. Moreover, acquisition of pro‐invasive phenotype by fibroblasts treated with SW480‐derived exosomes relied on exosome‐mediated MAPK pathway activation. Mass spectrometry‐based protein profiling reveals that cancer exosomes upregulate fibroblasts proteins implicated in focal adhesion (ITGA2/A6/AV, ITGB1/B4/B5, EGFR, CRK), regulators of actin cytoskeleton (RAC1, ARF1, ARPC3, CYFIP1, NCKAP1, ICAM1, ERM complex), and signalling pathways (MAPK, Rap1, RAC1, Ras) important in pro‐invasive remodeling of extracellular matrix. Blocking tumor exosome‐mediated signaling to fibroblasts therefore represents an attractive therapeutic strategy in restraining tumors by perturbing stroma‐driven invasive outgrowth.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Xiang L  Xie G  Ou J  Wei X  Pan F  Liang H 《PloS one》2012,7(4):e35378
The extra domain A (EDA)-containing fibronectin (EDA-FN), an alternatively spliced form of the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin, is predominantly expressed in various malignancies but not in normal tissues. In the present study, we investigated the potential pro-lymphangiogenesis effects of extra domain A (EDA)-mediated vascular endothelial growth factor-C (VEGF-C) secretion in colorectal carcinoma (CRC). We detected the expressions of EDA and VEGF-C in 52 human colorectal tumor tissues and their surrounding mucosae by immunohistochemical analysis, and further tested the correlation between the expressions of these two proteins in aforementioned CRC tissues. Both EDA and VEGF-C were abundantly expressed in the specimens of human CRC tissues. And VEGF-C was associated with increased expression of EDA in human CRC according to linear regression analysis. Besides, EDA expression was significantly correlated with lymph node metastasis, tumor differentiation and clinical stage by clinicopathological analysis of tissue microarrays containing tumor tissues of 115 CRC patients. Then, human CRC cell SW480 was transfected with lentivectors to elicit expression of shRNA against EDA (shRNA-EDA), and SW620 was transfected with a lentiviral vector to overexpress EDA (pGC-FU-EDA), respectively. We confirmed that VEGF-C was upregulated in EDA-overexpressed cells, and downregulated in shRNA-EDA cells. Moreover, a PI3K-dependent signaling pathway was found to be involved in EDA-mediated VEGF-C secretion. The in vivo result demonstrated that EDA could promote tumor growth and tumor-induced lymphangiogenesis in mouse xenograft models. Our findings provide evidence that EDA could play a role in tumor-induced lymphangiogenesis via upregulating autocrine secretion of VEGF-C in colorectal cancer, which is associated with the PI3K/Akt-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

10.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the three leading causes for cancer mortality. CRC kills over 600,000 people annually worldwide. The most common cause of death from CRC is the metastasis to distant organs. However, biomarkers for CRC metastasis remain ill-defined. We compared primary and metastatic CRC cell lines for their angiogenesis-protein profiles and intracellular signaling profiles to identify novel biomarkers for CRC metastasis. To this end, we used primary and metastatic CRC cell lines as a model system and normal human colon cell line as a control. The angiogenesis profiles two isogenic CRC cell lines, SW480 and SW620, and HT-29 and T84 revealed that VEGF was upregulated in both SW620 and T84 whereas coagulation factor III, IGFBP-3, DPP IV, PDGF AA/AB, endothelin I and CXCL16 were downregulated specifically in metastatic cell lines. Furthermore, we found that TIMP-1, amphiregulin, endostatin, angiogenin were upregulated in SW620 whereas downregulated in T84. Angiogenin was downregulated in T84 and GM-CSF was also downregulated in SW620. To induce CRC cell metastasis, we treated cells with pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-6. Upon IL-6 treatment, epithelial-mesenchymal transition was induced in CRC cells. When DLD-1 and HT-29 cells were treated with IL-6; Akt, STAT3, AMPKα and Bad phosphorylation levels were increased. Interestingly, SW620 showed the same signal activation pattern with IL-6 treatment of HT-29 and DLD-1. Our data suggest that Akt, STAT3, AMPKα and Bad activation can be biomarkers for metastatic colorectal cancer. IL-6 treatment specifically reduced phosphorylation levels of EGFR, HER2 receptor, Insulin R and IGF-1R in receptor tyrosine kinase array study with HT-29. Taken together, we have identified novel biomarkers for metastatic CRC through the angiogenesis-antibody array and intracellular signaling array studies. Present study suggests that those novel biomarkers can be used as CRC prognosis biomarkers, and as potential targets for the metastatic CRC therapy.  相似文献   

11.
Fibrinogen‐like protein 2 (FGL2) has been reported to play a key role in the development of human cancers. However, it is still unmasked whether FGL2 plays a potential role in colorectal carcinogenesis. In this study, the messenger RNA and protein expression levels were measured by quantitative real‐time polymerase chain reaction and western blot. Cell counting kit‐8 assay, transwell migration, and invasion assay were carried out to evaluate the proliferation, migration, and invasion of LOVO and SW620 cells. FGL2 was upregulated in colorectal cancer (CRC) tissues, as well as cell lines. Mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling was activated in CRC tissues and cell lines. FGL2 was confirmed to be downregulated by MAPK signaling inhibitor U0126. Further, we determined that knockdown of FGL2 caused a reduction of proliferation, migration, and invasion in LOVO and SW620 cells. Consistently, treatment of LOVO and SW620 cells with U0126 led to a decrease in cell proliferation, migration, and invasion. However, these changes initiated by U0126 were abolished by FGL2 overexpression. To conclude, MAPK‐mediated upregulation of FGL2 promotes the proliferation, migration, and invasion of CRC cells.  相似文献   

12.
We previously reported a novel positive feedback loop between thioredoxin‐1 (Trx‐1) and S100P, which promotes the invasion and metastasis of colorectal cancer (CRC). However, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this study, we examined the roles of Trx‐1 and S100P in CRC epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition (EMT) and their underlying mechanisms. We observed that knockdown of Trx‐1 or S100P in SW620 cells inhibited EMT, whereas overexpression of Trx‐1 or S100P in SW480 cells promoted EMT. Importantly, S100A4 and the phosphorylation of AKT were identified as potential downstream targets of Trx‐1 and S100P in CRC cells. Silencing S100A4 or inhibition of AKT phosphorylation eliminated S100P‐ or Trx‐1‐mediated CRC cell EMT, migration and invasion. Moreover, inhibition of AKT activity reversed S100P‐ or Trx‐1‐induced S100A4 expression. The expression of S100A4 was higher in human CRC tissues compared with their normal counterpart tissues and was significantly correlated with lymph node metastasis and poor survival. The overexpression of S100A4 protein was also positively correlated with S100P or Trx‐1 protein overexpression in our cohort of CRC tissues. In addition, overexpression of S100P reversed the Trx‐1 knockdown‐induced inhibition of S100A4 expression, EMT and migration and invasion in SW620 cells. The data suggest that interplay between Trx‐1 and S100P promoted CRC EMT as well as migration and invasion by up‐regulating S100A4 through AKT activation, thus providing further potential therapeutic targets for suppressing the EMT in metastatic CRC.  相似文献   

13.
Peritoneal carcinomatosis involves a series of events including tumor cell interactions with mesothelial cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM). We have studied the adhesive and invasive properties of four human colorectal carcinoma cell lines (Co115, HT29, SW480, SW620) confronted in vitro with a human mesothelial cell monolayer or with the ECM proteins collagen IV, laminin-1, fibronectin, tenascin-C and vitronectin. Quantitation was achieved following staining of tumor cells with the calcein-AM fluorescent dye. We found that all four cell lines rapidly adhered to a mesothelial cell monolayer. This adhesion event was not inhibitable by anti-integrin and anti-CD44 antibodies. Following initial attachment, the SW480 and SW620 cells invaded the mesothelial cell monolayer more aggressively than HT29 and Col 15 cells. All cell lines adhered to ECM proteins with each one exhibiting an individual adhesion pattern. Adhesion to matrix was completely integrin-dependent. When tested in an invasion assay, HT29 and Co115 cells crossed Matrigel-coated filters while SW480 and SW620 cells did not. This invasion was inhibited by anti-β1 integrin antibodies. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the initial colorectal tumor cell—mesothelial cell interaction occurs through an integrin-independent mechanism while adhesion to matrix proteins and invasion through Matrigel are integrin-dependent events. Furthermore, the different invasive capacity of SW480 and SW620 versus HT29 and Co115 cells upon interaction with a mesothelial cell monolayer or Matrigel suggests that these two invasion events may be mediated by distinct mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
Peritoneal carcinomatosis involves a series of events including tumor cell interactions with mesothelial cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM). We have studied the adhesive and invasive properties of four human colorectal carcinoma cell lines (Co115, HT29, SW480, SW620) confronted in vitro with a human mesothelial cell monolayer or with the ECM proteins collagen IV, laminin-1, fibronectin, tenascin-C and vitronectin. Quantitation was achieved following staining of tumor cells with the calcein-AM fluorescent dye. We found that all four cell lines rapidly adhered to a mesothelial cell monolayer. This adhesion event was not inhibitable by anti-integrin and anti-CD44 antibodies. Following initial attachment, the SW480 and SW620 cells invaded the mesothelial cell monolayer more aggressively than HT29 and Col 15 cells. All cell lines adhered to ECM proteins with each one exhibiting an individual adhesion pattern. Adhesion to matrix was completely integrin-dependent. When tested in an invasion assay, HT29 and Co115 cells crossed Matrigel-coated filters while SW480 and SW620 cells did not. This invasion was inhibited by anti-β1 integrin antibodies. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the initial colorectal tumor cell—mesothelial cell interaction occurs through an integrin-independent mechanism while adhesion to matrix proteins and invasion through Matrigel are integrin-dependent events. Furthermore, the different invasive capacity of SW480 and SW620 versus HT29 and Co115 cells upon interaction with a mesothelial cell monolayer or Matrigel suggests that these two invasion events may be mediated by distinct mechanisms.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The proteomic effects of specific cancer-related mutations have not been well characterized. In colorectal cancer (CRC), a relatively small number of mutations in key signaling pathways appear to drive tumorigenesis. Mutations in adenomatous polyposis coli (APC), a negative regulator of Wnt signaling, occur in up to 60% of CRC tumors. Here we examine the proteomic consequences of a single gene mutation by using an isogenic CRC cell culture model in which wildtype APC expression has been ectopically restored. Using LC-MS/MS label free shotgun proteomics, over 5000 proteins were identified in SW480Null (mutant APC) and SW480APC (APC restored). We observed 155 significantly differentially expressed proteins between the two cell lines, with 26 proteins showing opposite expression trends relative to gene expression measurements. Protein changes corresponded to previously characterized features of the APCNull phenotype: loss of cell adhesion proteins, increase in cell cycle regulators, alteration in Wnt signaling related proteins, and redistribution of β-catenin. Increased expression of RNA processing and isoprenoid biosynthetic proteins occurred in SW480Null cells. Therefore, shotgun proteomics reveals proteomic differences associated with a single gene change, including many novel differences that fall outside known target pathways.  相似文献   

17.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most common gastrointestinal cancer globally. Prevention of tumor cell proliferation and metastasis is vital for prolonging patient survival. Polyphenols provide a wide range of health benefits and prevention from cancer. In the gut, urolithins are the major metabolites of polyphenols. The objective of our study was to elucidate the molecular mechanism of the anticancer effect of urolithin A (UA) on colorectal cancer cells. UA was found to inhibit the cell proliferation of CRC cell lines in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner in HT29, SW480, and SW620 cells. Exposure to UA resulted in cell cycle arrest in a dose-dependent manner along with alteration in the expression of cell cycle–related protein. Treatment of CRC cell lines with UA resulted in the induction of apoptosis. Treatment of HT29, SW480, and SW620 with UA resulted in increased expression of the pro-apoptotic proteins, p53 and p21. Similarly, UA treatment inhibited the anti-apoptotic protein expression of Bcl-2. Moreover, exposure of UA induced cytochrome c release and caspase activation. Furthermore, UA was found to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in CRC cells. These findings indicate that UA possesses anticancer potential and may be used therapeutically for the treatment of CRC.Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12192-020-01189-8.  相似文献   

18.
While developing monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) to colorectal carcinoma (CRC) cells, we noted that one MoAb, termed CJA3, down-regulated natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity (NCMC) against CRC cell lines SW480 and SW620. The MoAb CJA3 was developed by immunizing a BALB/c mouse with fresh human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells. The antigen recognized by the MoAb CJA3 was expressed on several solid tumor cell lines and on one of the six lymphoreticular cell lines tested, but was not detected on normal peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). SDS-PAGE analysis of the antigen immunoprecipitated by the MoAb CJA3 from the CRC cell lines SW480 and SW620 and from the melanoma cell line MALME-3M revealed a component with a m.w. of 150,000. Preincubation of CRC cell lines SW480 and SW620 with the MoAb CJA3 for 16 hr reduced their susceptibility to NCMC by about 50%. Kinetic experiments showed that prolongation of the incubation of target cells with the MoAb CJA3 resulted in a time-dependent increase in the amount of MoAb bound. Maximum binding of the MoAb CJA3 was reached after 4 hr of incubation. The increase in antigen expression chronologically paralleled the decrease in NCMC target cell sensitivity, suggesting that the membrane alterations induced by the MoAb CJA3 were important for NCMC against these two cell lines.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer diagnosed worldwide. Recently, nucleolar complex protein 14 (NOP14) has been discovered to play a critical role in cancer development and progression, but the mechanisms of action of NOP14 in colorectal cancer remain to be elucidated. In this study, we used collected colorectal cancer tissues and cultured colorectal cancer cell lines (SW480, HT29, HCT116, DLD1, Lovo), and measured the mRNA and protein expression levels of NOP14 in colorectal cancer cells using qPCR and Western blotting. GFP-NOP14 was constructed and siRNA fragments against NOP14 were synthesized to investigate the importance of NOP14 for the development of colorectal cells. Transwell migration assays were used to measure cell invasion and migration, CCK-8 kits were used to measure cell activity, and flow cytometry was applied to the observation of apoptosis. We found that both the mRNA and protein levels of NOP14 were significantly upregulated in CRC tissues and cell lines. Overexpression of GFP-NOP14 markedly promoted the growth, migration, and invasion of the CRC cells HT19 and SW480, while genetic knockdown of NOP14 inhibited these behaviors. Overexpression of NOP14 promoted the expression of NRIP1 and phosphorylated inactivation of GSK-3β, leading to the upregulation of β-catenin. Genetic knockdown of NOP14 had the opposite effect on NRIP1/GSK-3/β-catenin signals. NOP14 therefore appears to be overexpressed in clinical samples and cell lines of colorectal cancer, and promotes the proliferation, growth, and metastasis of colorectal cancer cells by modulating the NRIP1/GSK-3β/β-catenin signaling pathway.Key words: Colorectal cancer, NOP14, proliferation, migration, invasion  相似文献   

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