Background: TGFbeta is an important cell growth regulator which may have a role in metastasis formation. Microsatellite unstable (MSI-H) colon cancer serves as a unique model to demonstrate this as most MSI-H colon cancers have a mutation in the transforming growth factor beta receptor II (TGFbetaRII) gene and a low metastatic rate.
Aims: To demonstrate an increase in invasion and metastasis in a MSI-H colorectal cancer cell line with a known mutation in TGFbetaRII.
Materials and methods: By restoring the wild-type TGFbetaRII gene in the KM12C MSI-H colorectal carcinoma cell line with a known mutation in TGFbetaRII, we have demonstrated that both invasion and metastasis in this cell line was significantly increased. A mouse metastatic model have shown that liver metastases were increased in mice inoculated with cells containing a wild-type TGFbetaRII gene (42% for the transfected group compared with 15% for the control group; p = 0.0379), despite a reduction in the size of primary tumours.
Conclusions: This study highlights an important mechanism which may contribute to the low metastatic rate of MSI-H colon cancers and demonstrates the importance of TGFbeta signalling in metastasis formation. Previous studies involving breast cancer cell lines have shown that blocking TGFbeta signalling results in a reduction in metastasis formation. This study is the first study to use a cell line with a low metastatic rate and TGFbetaRII mutations to demonstrate that restoring TGFbeta signalling increases the metastatic rate.