In epithelial cancers, carcinoma cells coexist with normal cells. Although it is known that the tumor microenvironment (TME) plays a pivotal role in cancer progression, it is not completely understood how the tumor influences adjacent normal epithelial cells. In this study, a three-dimensional co-culture system comprising non-transformed epithelial cells (MDCK) and transformed carcinoma cells (MSV-MDCK) was used to demonstrate that carcinoma cells sequentially induce preneoplastic lumen filling and epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) in epithelial cysts. MMP-9 secreted by carcinoma cells cleaves cellular E-cadherin (encoded by CDH1) from epithelial cells to generate soluble E-cadherin (sE-cad), a pro-oncogenic protein. We show that sE-cad induces EGFR activation, resulting in lumen filling in MDCK cysts. Long-term sE-cad treatment induced EMT. sE-cad caused lumen filling by induction of the ERK signaling pathway and triggered EMT through the sustained activation of the AKT pathway. Although it is known that sE-cad induces MMP-9 release and consequent EGFR activation in tumor cells, our results, for the first time, demonstrate that carcinoma cells can induce sE-cad shedding in adjacent epithelial cells, which leads to EGFR activation and the eventual transdifferentiation of the normal epithelial cells.

Author contributions

P. U. Patil and A. K. Rajasekaran conceived and designed the work, and with J.D'Ambrosio, developed the methodology. P. U. Patil, J. D'Ambrosio, L. J. Inge and A. K. Rajasekaran acquired data. P. U. Patil, L. J. Inge and A. K. Rajasekaran analyzed and interpreted data (eg. statistical analysis, biostatistics, computational analysis). P. U. Patil, R. W. Mason and A. K. Rajasekaran wrote, review and/or revised the manuscript. R. W. Mason and A. K. Rajasekaran contributed to administrative, technical and material support (ie. reporting or organizing data, constructing databases). A. K. Rajasekaran supervised the study.

Funding

This work was supported by funds from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [grant number DK56216]; the Nemours Research Programs; and the Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) [grant number P20GM103464]. Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.

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