Reference SummaryOtsuka T, Cancer Res 1998 Nov 15;58(22):5157-67

Title

c-Met autocrine activation induces development of malignant melanoma and acquisition of the metastatic phenotype.

Authors

Otsuka T; Takayama H; Sharp R; Celli G; LaRochelle WJ; Bottaro DP; Ellmore N; Vieira W; Owens JW; Anver M; Merlino G

Journal

Cancer Res

Volume

58

Issue

22

Year

1998

Pages

5157-67

Abstract

The molecular and genetic events that contribute to the genesis and progression of cutaneous malignant melanoma, a complex and aggressive disease with a high propensity for metastasis, are poorly understood due in large part to the dearth of relevant experimental animal models. Here we used transgenic mice ectopically expressing hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) to show that the Met signaling pathway is an important in vivo regulator of melanocyte function, whose subversion induces malignant melanoma. Tumorigenesis occurred in stages, beginning with the abnormal accumulation of melanocytes in the epidermis and dermis and culminating in the development of metastatic melanoma. Oncogenesis in this model was driven by creation of HGF/SF-Met autocrine loops through forced expression of the transgenic ligand and apparent selection of melanocytes overexpressing endogenous receptor, rather than paracrine stimulation or mutational activation of c-met. Preference for liver as a metastatic target correlated with high HGF/SF-Met autocrine activity, consistent with the notion that such activity may influence colonization. Although basic fibroblast growth factor and its receptor were both weakly expressed in the majority of melanomas examined, high levels were found only in those rare neoplasms with low or undetectable HGF/SF and Met expression, suggesting that these two tyrosine kinase receptor autocrine loops serve a critical overlapping function in melanocytic tumorigenesis. Our data support a causal role for HGF/SF-Met signaling in the development of melanoma and acquisition of the metastatic phenotype. Moreover, this transgenic mouse should serve as a highly useful model, facilitating our understanding of mechanisms by which human melanoma progresses to malignancy and expediting the development of efficacious therapeutic modalities designed to constrain metastasis.

Links

J:50947 – MGI References
9823327 – National Library of Medicine/PubMed

Models

Strain Model Name Treatment Agent(s) Organ Affected Frequency Model Details
FVB/N Skin - Melanocyte melanoma Skin - Melanocyte

0

FVB/N-Tg(Mt1-Hgf)#Lmb Skin - Melanocyte melanoma - amelanotic Skin - Melanocyte

22

FVB/N-Tg(Mt1-HGFSF)19Lmb Skin - Melanocyte melanoma - amelanotic Skin - Melanocyte

observed

FVB/N-Tg(Mt1-HGFSF)22Lmb Skin - Melanocyte melanoma - amelanotic Skin - Melanocyte

observed

FVB/N-Tg(Mt1-Hgf)31Lmb Skin - Melanocyte melanoma - amelanotic Skin - Melanocyte

observed

FVB/N-Tg(Mt1-Hgf)37Lmb Skin - Melanocyte melanoma - amelanotic Skin - Melanocyte

observed