Litcius/Paper detail

Tetraspanin 6 is a regulator of carcinogenesis in colorectal cancer

Regina Andrijes, Rahul Hejmadi, Matthew Pugh, Sundaresan Rajesh, Vera Novitskaya, Maha Ibrahim, Michael Overduin, Chris Tselepis, Gary Middleton, Balázs Győrffy, Andrew D. Beggs, Fedor Berditchevski

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

mice, a well-established model for premalignant CRC, resulted in increased incidence of adenoma formation and tumor size. We demonstrate that the effect of Tspan6 deletion results in the activation of EGF-dependent signaling pathways through increased production of the transmembrane form of TGF-α (tmTGF-α) associated with extracellular vesicles. This pathway is modulated by an adaptor protein syntenin-1, which physically links Tspan6 and tmTGF-α. In support of this, the expression of Tspan6 is frequently decreased or lost in CRC, and this correlates with poor survival. Furthermore, the analysis of samples from the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-targeting clinical trial (COIN trial) has shown that the expression of Tspan6 in CRC correlated with better patient responses to EGFR-targeted therapy involving Cetuximab. Importantly, Tspan6-positive patients with tumors in the proximal colon (right-sided) and those with KRAS mutations had a better response to Cetuximab than the patients that expressed low Tspan6 levels. These results identify Tspan6 as a regulator of CRC development and a potential predictive marker for EGFR-targeted therapies in CRC beyond RAS pathway mutations.

Topics & Concepts

TetraspaninEpidermal growth factor receptorColorectal cancerRegulatorCancer researchCetuximabBiomarkerCarcinogenesisSuppressorTransmembrane proteinCancerBiologyInternal medicineMedicineReceptorGeneGeneticsCellCell Adhesion Molecules ResearchCaveolin-1 and cellular processesCancer Cells and Metastasis