Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The extracellular matrix has a major effect upon the malignant properties of bladder cancer cells both <it>in vitro </it>in 3-dimensional culture and <it>in vivo</it>. Comparing gene expression of several blad...

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Main Authors: Dozmorov Igor, Knowlton Nicholas, Saban Ricardo, Kyker Kimberly D, Dozmorov Mikhail G, Centola Michael B, Hurst Robert E
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2006-01-01
Series:BMC Cancer
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2407/6/12
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spelling doaj-da4d4ecb5dd2458c8acb60cd2d4160f22020-11-24T20:54:42ZengBMCBMC Cancer1471-24072006-01-01611210.1186/1471-2407-6-12Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cellsDozmorov IgorKnowlton NicholasSaban RicardoKyker Kimberly DDozmorov Mikhail GCentola Michael BHurst Robert E<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The extracellular matrix has a major effect upon the malignant properties of bladder cancer cells both <it>in vitro </it>in 3-dimensional culture and <it>in vivo</it>. Comparing gene expression of several bladder cancer cells lines grown under permissive and suppressive conditions in 3-dimensional growth on cancer-derived and normal-derived basement membrane gels respectively and on plastic in conventional tissue culture provides a model system for investigating the interaction of malignancy and extracellular matrix. Understanding how the extracellular matrix affects the phenotype of bladder cancer cells may provide important clues to identify new markers or targets for therapy.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Five bladder cancer cell lines and one immortalized, but non-tumorigenic, urothelial line were grown on Matrigel, a cancer-derived ECM, on SISgel, a normal-derived ECM, and on plastic, where the only ECM is derived from the cells themselves. The transcriptomes were analyzed on an array of 1186 well-annotated cancer derived cDNAs containing most of the major pathways for malignancy. Hypervariable genes expressing more variability across cell lines than a set expressing technical variability were analyzed further. Expression values were clustered, and to identify genes most likely to represent biological factors, statistically over-represented ontologies and transcriptional regulatory elements were identified.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Approximately 400 of the 1186 total genes were expressed 2 SD above background. Approximately 100 genes were hypervariable in cells grown on each ECM, but the pattern was different in each case. A core of 20 were identified as hypervariable under all 3 growth conditions, and 33 were hypervariable on both SISgel and Matrigel, but not on plastic. Clustering of the hypervariable genes showed very different patterns for the same 6 cell types on the different ECM. Even when loss of cell cycle regulation was identified, different genes were involved, depending on the ECM. Under the most permissive conditions of growth where the malignant phenotype was fully expressed, activation of AKT was noted. TGFβ1 signaling played a major role in the response of bladder cancer cells to ECM. Identification of TREs on genes that clustered together suggested some clustering was driven by specific transcription factors.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The extracellular matrix on which cancer cells are grown has a major effect on gene expression. A core of 20 malignancy-related genes were not affected by matrix, and 33 were differentially expressed on 3-dimensional culture as opposed to plastic. Other than these genes, the patterns of expression were very different in cells grown on SISgel than on Matrigel or even plastic, supporting the hypothesis that growth of bladder cancer cells on normal matrix suppresses some malignant functions. Unique underlying regulatory networks were driving gene expression and could be identified by the approach outlined here.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2407/6/12
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dozmorov Igor
Knowlton Nicholas
Saban Ricardo
Kyker Kimberly D
Dozmorov Mikhail G
Centola Michael B
Hurst Robert E
spellingShingle Dozmorov Igor
Knowlton Nicholas
Saban Ricardo
Kyker Kimberly D
Dozmorov Mikhail G
Centola Michael B
Hurst Robert E
Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells
BMC Cancer
author_facet Dozmorov Igor
Knowlton Nicholas
Saban Ricardo
Kyker Kimberly D
Dozmorov Mikhail G
Centola Michael B
Hurst Robert E
author_sort Dozmorov Igor
title Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells
title_short Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells
title_full Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells
title_fullStr Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells
title_sort analysis of the interaction of extracellular matrix and phenotype of bladder cancer cells
publisher BMC
series BMC Cancer
issn 1471-2407
publishDate 2006-01-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The extracellular matrix has a major effect upon the malignant properties of bladder cancer cells both <it>in vitro </it>in 3-dimensional culture and <it>in vivo</it>. Comparing gene expression of several bladder cancer cells lines grown under permissive and suppressive conditions in 3-dimensional growth on cancer-derived and normal-derived basement membrane gels respectively and on plastic in conventional tissue culture provides a model system for investigating the interaction of malignancy and extracellular matrix. Understanding how the extracellular matrix affects the phenotype of bladder cancer cells may provide important clues to identify new markers or targets for therapy.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Five bladder cancer cell lines and one immortalized, but non-tumorigenic, urothelial line were grown on Matrigel, a cancer-derived ECM, on SISgel, a normal-derived ECM, and on plastic, where the only ECM is derived from the cells themselves. The transcriptomes were analyzed on an array of 1186 well-annotated cancer derived cDNAs containing most of the major pathways for malignancy. Hypervariable genes expressing more variability across cell lines than a set expressing technical variability were analyzed further. Expression values were clustered, and to identify genes most likely to represent biological factors, statistically over-represented ontologies and transcriptional regulatory elements were identified.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Approximately 400 of the 1186 total genes were expressed 2 SD above background. Approximately 100 genes were hypervariable in cells grown on each ECM, but the pattern was different in each case. A core of 20 were identified as hypervariable under all 3 growth conditions, and 33 were hypervariable on both SISgel and Matrigel, but not on plastic. Clustering of the hypervariable genes showed very different patterns for the same 6 cell types on the different ECM. Even when loss of cell cycle regulation was identified, different genes were involved, depending on the ECM. Under the most permissive conditions of growth where the malignant phenotype was fully expressed, activation of AKT was noted. TGFβ1 signaling played a major role in the response of bladder cancer cells to ECM. Identification of TREs on genes that clustered together suggested some clustering was driven by specific transcription factors.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The extracellular matrix on which cancer cells are grown has a major effect on gene expression. A core of 20 malignancy-related genes were not affected by matrix, and 33 were differentially expressed on 3-dimensional culture as opposed to plastic. Other than these genes, the patterns of expression were very different in cells grown on SISgel than on Matrigel or even plastic, supporting the hypothesis that growth of bladder cancer cells on normal matrix suppresses some malignant functions. Unique underlying regulatory networks were driving gene expression and could be identified by the approach outlined here.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2407/6/12
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