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Metastatic dissemination of breast cancer stem cells requires MenaINV for lung extravasation but not survival.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 2026

Nauman M, Jung Y, Karadal BF, Shukla S, Duran CL, Li J, Patel P, Friedman-DeLuca M, Barth ND, Eddy R, Guo W, Condeelis JS, Entenberg D, Oktay MH

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Cancer stemness is a pivotal driver of tumor initiation, treatment resistance, and tumor cell survival.

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APA Nauman M, Jung Y, et al. (2026). Metastatic dissemination of breast cancer stem cells requires MenaINV for lung extravasation but not survival.. bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology. https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.01.21.700685
MLA Nauman M, et al.. "Metastatic dissemination of breast cancer stem cells requires MenaINV for lung extravasation but not survival.." bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology, 2026.
PMID 41648588

Abstract

Cancer stemness is a pivotal driver of tumor initiation, treatment resistance, and tumor cell survival. Cancer stem cells (CSCs), though constituting only a small fraction of primary tumor cells, are progressively enriched during metastatic progression: from circulating tumor cells traveling in the bloodstream, to disseminated tumor cells lodged in the lung vasculature, to extravasated tumor cells that have entered tissue parenchyma. However, whether CSCs have an intrinsic advantage for extravasation over cancer non-stem cells (CnSCs), or simply their increased representation in circulation renders them more likely to extravasate, remains unresolved. MenaINV, an invasive isoform of the actin regulatory protein Mena, promotes tumor cell transendothelial migration in primary and secondary sites, yet the direct mechanistic link between stemness and MenaINV in lung metastasis remains unresolved. Here, using a validated fluorescent stemness reporter (SORE6) to identify CSCs, we found that CSCs display elevated MenaINV expression relative to CnSCs. High-resolution intravital imaging showed that CSCs extravasate efficiently into lung parenchyma and survive at higher levels, robustly forming metastatic lesions, while CnSCs show limited extravasation, low survival, and poor colonization. Mechanistically, MenaINV disruption in CSCs specifically impaired extravasation without affecting survival, demonstrating that MenaINV is the key extravasation effector downstream of stemness, whereas stemness-associated factors independently confer survival advantages. Moreover, reintroduction of MenaINV in CnSCs restores their extravasation ability upon which extravasated CnSCs reactivate stem program and form metastases. Overall, we discovered a hierarchical framework where stemness regulates both survival and extravasation capacity, with MenaINV as the key CSC extravasation effector. Significance: This study reveals how breast cancer stem cells achieve metastatic dominance through separable pathways: MenaINV-dependent extravasation and MenaINV-independent survival, providing rationale for targeting stem program to improve patient outcome.