Authors
Elvin Wagenblast, Mar Soto, Sara Gutiérrez-Ángel, Christina A Hartl, Annika L Gable, Ashley R Maceli, Nicolas Erard, Alissa M Williams, Sun Y Kim, Steffen Dickopf, J Chuck Harrell, Andrew D Smith, Charles M Perou, John E Wilkinson, Gregory J Hannon, Simon RV Knott
Publication date
2015/4/16
Journal
Nature
Volume
520
Issue
7547
Pages
358-362
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Cancer metastasis requires that primary tumour cells evolve the capacity to intravasate into the lymphatic system or vasculature, and extravasate into and colonize secondary sites. Others have demonstrated that individual cells within complex populations show heterogeneity in their capacity to form secondary lesions,,,. Here we develop a polyclonal mouse model of breast tumour heterogeneity, and show that distinct clones within a mixed population display specialization, for example, dominating the primary tumour, contributing to metastatic populations, or showing tropism for entering the lymphatic or vasculature systems. We correlate these stable properties to distinct gene expression profiles. Those clones that efficiently enter the vasculature express two secreted proteins, Serpine2 and Slpi, which were necessary and sufficient to program these cells for vascular mimicry. Our data indicate that these proteins not …
Total citations
201520162017201820192020202120222023202411404546505468415224
Scholar articles