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WNT5A promotes migration and invasion of human osteosarcoma cells via SRC/ERK/MMP-14 pathway.

WNT5A, a representative ligand of activating several non-canonical WNT signal pathways, plays significant roles in oncogenesis and tumor inhibition. It has been shown that the non-receptor tyrosine kinase SRC is required for WNT5A-induced invasion of osteosarcoma cells. However, the precise molecular mechanism underlying WNT5A/SRC-mediated osteosarcoma cells invasion remains poorly defined. The study was designed to explore the role of ERK1/2 in WNT5A/SRC-induced osteosarcoma cells invasion and the downstream target of the SRC/ERK1/2 signalings. We found that WNT5A (100 ng/mL) remarkably stimulated migration and invasion of human osteosarcoma MG-63 cells, whereas inhibiting either SRC kinase activity by siRNA-mediated SRC silence or ERK1/2 phosphorylation by PD98059 treatment suppressed these effects, which suggested that the activation of SRC and ERK1/2 is essential for WNT5A-induced MG-63 cells migration and invasion. Furthermore, ERK1/2 phosphorylation induced by WNT5A was dramatically blocked by SRC siRNA. Additionally, our study further demonstrated that MMP-14 was upregulated after exposure to WNT5A in MG-63 cells, and the increased expression was blocked by SRC siRNA or PD98059. Collectively, these results indicate that WNT5A activates SRC/ERK1/2 signal pathway, leading to the upregulation of MMP-14 expression and MG-63 cells migration and invasion.

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