RHOV is a Detachment-Responsive Rho GTPase Necessary for Ovarian Cancer Peritoneal Metastasis

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Abstract

All ovarian cancer subtypes spread via transcoelomic metastasis, where cells disseminate into the peritoneal fluid, resist anoikis, and form multicellular aggregates that invade the peritoneum. This represents the main driver of morbidity and mortality for peritoneal cancer patients. Mechanisms necessary for cancer cells to survive matrix detachment and initiate transcoelomic metastasis remain poorly defined. To address this, we identified a conserved detachment-sensitive gene signature activated shortly after matrix-detachment across multiple ascites-derived cancer cell lines. RHOV, an atypical, constitutively active and understudied member of the Rho GTPase family, emerged as a top upregulated transcript, which was confirmed in patient ascites-derived tumor cells. Functionally, loss of RHOV impairs anoikis resistance, multicellular aggregate integrity, migration and invasion, and completely abolishes transcoelomic tumor progression in vivo. RHOV enhances c-Jun signaling and cytoskeletal remodeling, which is dependent on both RHOV GTP-binding and membrane localization. These findings define RHOV as a novel detachment-sensitive Rho GTPase and establish RHOV as a critical regulator of peritoneal metastasis for the first time.

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