Cathepsin-D is an independent marker of poor prognosis in human breast cancer. We previously showed that human wild-type cathepsin-D, as well as its mutated form devoid of proteolytic activity stably transfected in 3Y1-Ad12 cancer cells, stimulated tumor growth. To investigate the mechanisms by which human cathepsin-D and its catalytically-inactive counterpart promoted tumor growth in vivo, we quantified the expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen, the number of blood vessels and of apoptotic cells in 3Y1-Ad12 tumor xenografts. We first verified that both human wild-type and mutated cathepsin-D were expressed at a high level in cathepsin-D xenografts, whereas no human cathepsin-D was detected in control xenografts. Our immunohistochemical studies then revealed that both wild-type cathepsin-D and catalytically-inactive cathepsin-D, increased proliferating cell nuclear antigen expression and tumor angiogenesis. Interestingly, wild-type cathepsin-D significantly inhibited tumor apoptosis, whereas catalytically-inactive cathepsin-D did not. We therefore propose that human cathepsin-D stimulates tumor growth by acting -directly or indirectly -as a mitogenic factor on both cancer and endothelial cells independently of its catalytic activity. Our overall results provide the first mechanistic evidences on the essential role of cathepsin-D at multiple tumor progression steps, affecting cell proliferation, angiogenesis and apoptosis.
The aspartyl-protease cathepsin D (cath-D) is overexpressed and hypersecreted by epithelial breast cancer cells and stimulates their proliferation. As tumor epithelial–fibroblast cell interactions are important events in cancer progression, we investigated whether cath-D overexpression affects also fibroblast behavior. We demonstrate a requirement of cath-D for fibroblast invasive growth using a three-dimensional (3D) coculture assay with cancer cells secreting or not pro-cath-D. Ectopic expression of cath-D in cath-D–deficient fibroblasts stimulates 3D outgrowth that is associated with a significant increase in fibroblast proliferation, survival, motility, and invasive capacity, accompanied by activation of the ras–MAPK pathway. Interestingly, all these stimulatory effects on fibroblasts are independent of cath-D proteolytic activity. Finally, we show that pro-cath-D secreted by cancer cells is captured by fibroblasts and partially mimics effects of transfected cath-D. We conclude that cath-D is crucial for fibroblast invasive outgrowth and could act as a key paracrine communicator between cancer and stromal cells, independently of its catalytic activity.
Cathepsin-D, a lysosomal aspartyl proteinase, is highly secreted by breast cancer cells and its over-expression by transfection stimulates cancer cell proliferation. The mechanism by which this protease a ects proliferation remains, however, unknown. In order to determine whether proteolytic activity is necessary, we abolished its enzymatic activity using site-directed mutagenesis followed by stable transfection in 3Y1-Ad12 cancer cells. Substitution of the aspartic acid residue 231 by an asparagine residue in its catalytic site abrogated the cathepsin-D proteolytic activity but did not a ect its expression level, processing or secretion. However, like wild-type cathepsin-D, this mutated catalytically-inactive cathepsin-D retained its capacity to stimulate proliferation of cells embedded in Matrigel or collagen I matrices, colony formation in soft agar and tumor growth in athymic nude mice. Addition on the mocktransfected cells, of either conditioned media containing the wild-type or the mutated pro-cathepsin-D, or of the puri®ed mutated pro-cathepsin-D, partially mimicked the mitogenic activity of the transfected cathepsin-D, indicating a role of the secreted pro-enzyme. Moreover, addition of two anti-cathepsin-D antibodies on the cathepsin-D transfected cells inhibited their proliferation, suggesting an action of the secreted pro-cathepsin-D via an autocrine loop. A synthetic peptide containing the 27-44 residue moiety of the cathepsin-D pro-fragment was, however, not mitogenic suggesting that a receptor for the pro-fragment was not involved. Furthermore, the cathepsin-D mitogenicity was not blocked by inhibiting the interaction of pro-cathepsin-D with the mannose-6-phosphate receptors. Our results altogether demonstrate that a mutated cathepsin-D devoid of catalytic activity is still mitogenic and suggest that it is acting extracellularly by triggering directly or indirectly a yet unidenti®ed cell surface receptor. Oncogene (2001) 20, 6920 ± 6929.
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