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NDRG1 regulates Filopodia-induced Colorectal Cancer invasiveness via modulating CDC42 activity

Batuer Aikemu, Yanfei Shao, Guang Yang, Junjun Ma, Sen Zhang, Xiao Yang, Hiju Hong, Galiya Yesseyeva, Ling Huang, Hongtao Jia, Chenxing Wang, Lu Zang, Jing Ping Sun, Minhua Zheng

2021International Journal of Biological Sciences44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

N-myc downstream regulated gene-1 (NDRG1) has been identified as a putative metastasis suppressor gene and proved to be a key player in cancer spreading and proliferation in our previous work. However, the effects of NDRG1 on tumor invasion and the mechanisms behind it are rarely understood. Here we provided in silico evidence that NDRG1 plays a crucial role in actin reorganization in colorectal cancer (CRC). Through in vitro experiments, we next observed filopodia formation was altered in NDRG1-modified cell lines, while cell division cycle-42 (CDC42) displayed excessive activation in NDRG1-silenced cells. Mechanistically, NDRG1 loss disrupts the binding between RhoGDI and CDC42 and triggers the activation of CDC42 and the downstream cascades PAK1/Cofilin, thereby promotes the formation of filopodia and invasiveness of CRC. The knockdown of NDRG1 led to enhanced dissemination of CRC cells in vivo and correlates with active CDC42 expression. Using clinical sample analysis, we found an elevated level of active CDC42 in patients with advanced T stage, and it was negatively related to NDRG1 expression. In sum, these results uncover a mechanism utilized by NDRG1 to regulate CDC42 activity in coordinating cytoskeleton reorganization, which was crucial in cancer invasion.

Topics & Concepts

CDC42FilopodiaCell biologyGene knockdownBiologyInvadopodiaPAK1Actin cytoskeletonCancer researchRAC1Cancer cellCancerActinSignal transductionCellCytoskeletonCell cultureGeneticsMechanisms of cancer metastasisProtein Kinase Regulation and GTPase SignalingEnzyme Structure and Function
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