The Role of Nesprin-4 in Breast Cancer Migration and Invasion
Badria Fouad Al-Sammak, Lutfiye Yildiz Ozer, Hend Salah Fayed, Nada Mohamed Kafour, Johan Ericsson, Ayman Al Haj Zen, Henning F. Horn

TL;DR
This study explores how nesprin-4 affects breast cancer migration and invasion, finding it both promotes and blocks certain cancer spread steps.
Contribution
The study reveals a dual role of nesprin-4 in breast cancer metastasis, influencing migration while blocking intravasation.
Findings
Nesprin-4 is upregulated in breast cancer but reduced in triple-negative breast cancer.
Nesprin-4 promotes migration and invasion by driving cell polarization.
Nesprin-4 impedes intravasation into endothelial microvessels.
Abstract
Cancer metastasis is responsible for most cancer-related deaths. Migration and invasion, key steps in the metastatic cascade, require nuclear pliability to traverse the physical barriers of the extracellular matrix and cell–cell junctions. The nuclear envelope (NE) contains LINC complex proteins, including nesprin-4, which regulate nuclear integrity, stiffness, and cell movement. We report that nesprin-4 expression is generally upregulated in breast cancer samples but is reduced in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) samples compared to other subtypes. A nesprin-4 expression analysis in 62 breast cancer cell lines showed that nesprin-4 expression correlates positively with cell lines representing less aggressive tumors, while TNBC cell lines have low or no nesprin-4 expression. To determine the role of nesprin-4, we modulated nesprin-4 expression levels in three breast cancer cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear Structure and Function · RNA Research and Splicing · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions
