PLoS ONE (Oct 2009)

Tumor suppressor function of Syk in human MCF10A in vitro and normal mouse mammary epithelium in vivo.

  • You Me Sung,
  • Xuehua Xu,
  • Junfeng Sun,
  • Duane Mueller,
  • Kinza Sentissi,
  • Peter Johnson,
  • Elana Urbach,
  • Françoise Seillier-Moiseiwitsch,
  • Michael D Johnson,
  • Susette C Mueller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007445
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 10
p. e7445

Abstract

Read online

The normal function of Syk in epithelium of the developing or adult breast is not known, however, Syk suppresses tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis in breast cancer cells. Here, we demonstrate that in the mouse mammary gland, loss of one Syk allele profoundly increases proliferation and ductal branching and invasion of epithelial cells through the mammary fat pad during puberty. Mammary carcinomas develop by one year. Syk also suppresses proliferation and invasion in vitro. siRNA or shRNA knockdown of Syk in MCF10A breast epithelial cells dramatically increased proliferation, anchorage independent growth, cellular motility, and invasion, with formation of functional, extracellular matrix-degrading invadopodia. Morphological and gene microarray analysis following Syk knockdown revealed a loss of luminal and differentiated epithelial features with epithelial to mesenchymal transition and a gain in invadopodial cell surface markers CD44, CD49F, and MMP14. These results support the role of Syk in limiting proliferation and invasion of epithelial cells during normal morphogenesis, and emphasize the critical role of Syk as a tumor suppressor for breast cancer. The question of breast cancer risk following systemic anti-Syk therapy is raised since only partial loss of Syk was sufficient to induce mammary carcinomas.