A paracrine activin A–mDia2 axis promotes squamous carcinogenesis via fibroblast reprogramming
Abstract
Cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are key regulators of tumorigenesis and promising targets for next‐generation therapies. We discovered that cancer cell‐derived activin A reprograms fibroblasts into pro‐tumorigenic CAFs. Mechanistically, this occurs via Smad2‐mediated transcriptional regulation of the formin mDia2, which directly promotes filopodia formation and cell migration. mDia2 also induces expression of CAF marker genes through prevention of p53 nuclear accumulation, resulting in the production of a pro‐tumorigenic matrisome and secretome. The translational relevance of this finding is reflected by activin A overexpression in tumor cells and of mDia2 in the stroma of skin cancer and other malignancies and the correlation of high activin A/mDia2 levels with poor patient survival. Blockade of this signaling axis using inhibitors of activin, activin receptors, or mDia2 suppressed cancer cell malignancy and squamous carcinogenesis in 3D organotypic cultures, ex vivo, and in vivo, providing a rationale for pharmacological inhibition of activin A‐mDia2 signaling in stratified cancer patients. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000408502Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
EMBO Molecular MedicineVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Wiley-BlackwellSubject
Activin; CAF; Carcinogenesis; mDia2; Tumor microenvironmentOrganisational unit
03520 - Werner, Sabine / Werner, Sabine
Funding
169204 - Role of cytokines and environmental cues in wound repair and inflammatory skin disease (SNF)
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