Michael, Iacovos P.Saghafinia, SadeghTichet, MelanieZangger, NadineMarinoni, IlariaPerren, AurelHanahan, Douglas2019-06-182019-06-182019-06-182019-05-0610.1016/j.devcel.2019.04.015https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/157583WOS:000466934100015Herein, we report that the TGF beta superfamily receptor ALK7 is a suppressor of tumorigenesis and metastasis, as revealed by functional studies in mouse models of pancreatic neuroendocrine and lumina! breast cancer, complemented by experimental metastasis assays. Activation in neoplastic cells of the ALK7 signaling pathway by its principal ligand activin B induces apoptosis. During tumorigenesis, cancer cells use two different approaches to evade this barrier, either downregulating activin B and/or downregulating ALK7. Suppressing ALK7 expression additionally contributes to the capability for metastatic seeding. ALK7 is associated with shorter relapse-free survival of various human cancers and distant-metastasis-free survival of breast cancer patients. This study introduces mechanistic insights into primary and metastatic tumor development, in the form of a protective barrier that triggers apoptosis in cells that are not "authorized" to proliferate within a particular tissue, by virtue of those cells expressing ALK7 in a tissue microenvironment bathed in its ligand.Cell BiologyDevelopmental Biologybreast-cancer metastasistgf-betatransgenic miceneuroendocrine tumorspancreatic-cancercell-survivalmouse modelsactivinexpressionapoptosisALK7 Signaling Manifests a Homeostatic Tissue Barrier That Is Abrogated during Tumorigenesis and Metastasistext::journal::journal article::research article