Journal of Epithelial Biology & Pharmacology

2009, 2 : 14-22
Published online 2009 May 8. DOI: 10.2174/1875044300902010014
Publisher ID: JEBP-2-14

Tobacco Smoke Activates Protein Association and Tyrosine Phosphorylation of the GPI-Transamidase Complex Subunits in Human Cancers

Yiping Huang , Jatin Nagpal , Barry Trink and Edward Ratovitski
Cancer Research Building-2, Rm 2M05, 1550 Orleans Street, Baltimore, MD 21231, USA.

ABSTRACT

We previously found that the protein subunits of GPI-transamidase complex (e.g. PIG-U, PIG-T and GPAA1) play critical roles of oncogenes in human bladder and breast cancers manifesting their activities through signaling mechanisms that involve urokinase receptor/Stat3 and paxillin pathways. We report here that cigarette smoke extract (CSE) enhanced colony formation and invasiveness of certain human cancer cells (e.g. head and neck, bladder or breast). We found that CSE induced the complex formation between PIG-U, PIG-T and GPAA1 proteins and also the association between GPAA1 and EGFR in cancer cells. We observed that inhibitors of EGFR tyrosine kinase, Gefitinib or Erlotinib, modulated tyrosine phosphorylation of PIG-U and PIG-T induced by CSE. We also found that EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors and siRNA silencing of PIG-U, PIG-T or GPAA1 modulated the CSE-induced increase in colony formation and invasiveness of human bladder cancer cells. We suggest that the novel mechanism overlapping the oncogenic potential of PIG-U, PIG-T and GPAA1 implicates EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation of PIG-U or PIG-T and subsequent paxillin phosphorylation.