MCAM Expression Facilitates Melanoma-Endothelial Interactions and Promotes Metastatic Disease Progression

被引:0
作者
Braun, Andreas Dominik [1 ]
Mengoni, Miriam [1 ]
Tueting, Thomas [1 ]
Gaffal, Evelyn [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp Magdeburg, Dept Dermatol, Lab Expt Dermatol, Magdeburg, Germany
[2] Univ Lubeck, Dept Dermatol Allergy & Venereol, Lubeck, Germany
关键词
cell adhesion; MCAM; melanoma; metastasis; migration; CELL INTERACTIONS; CANCER; S100A8/A9; MIGRATION; ADHESION; PLATFORM; CD146;
D O I
10.1111/exd.70059
中图分类号
R75 [皮肤病学与性病学];
学科分类号
100206 ;
摘要
Invasive growth and metastatic dissemination represent the primary cause of death in cancer patients. In order to successfully detach from the primary tumour and establish metastases in distant tissues, cancer cells need to dynamically rewire their cell adhesion machinery. Here we revisit the potential association of MCAM, a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily that was initially identified as a melanoma antigen, with disease progression. Using immunohistochemical stainings and bioinformatic analyses of published datasets, we find abundant MCAM expression both in primary and metastatic human melanomas. In additional bioinformatic analyses, we show that MCAM is highly expressed in foetal melanocytes and subsequently downregulated during melanocyte maturation. Bioinformatic inference of cellular communication networks reveals that melanoma cells with high MCAM expression more actively engage in signalling crosstalk with endothelial cells. Experimental investigations demonstrate that disruption of MCAM in melanoma cells inhibits their migration on endothelial cell surfaces in vitro and decreases their ability to develop spontaneous lung metastases in vivo. Taken together, our results could not confirm the notion that MCAM expression represents a useful biomarker for disease progression but provide evidence that MCAM expression might represent part of a reactivated embryonal transcriptional program that facilitates melanoma-endothelial cell interactions during metastatic progression.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]  
Gerstberger S., Jiang Q., Ganesh K., Metastasis, Cell, 186, pp. 1564-1579, (2023)
[2]  
Hamidi H., Ivaska J., Every Step of the Way: Integrins in Cancer Progression and Metastasis, Nature Reviews. Cancer, 18, pp. 533-548, (2018)
[3]  
Dongre A., Weinberg R.A., New Insights Into the Mechanisms of Epithelial–Mesenchymal Transition and Implications for Cancer, Nature Reviews. Molecular Cell Biology, 20, pp. 69-84, (2019)
[4]  
Janiszewska M., Primi M.C., Izard T., Cell Adhesion in Cancer: Beyond the Migration of Single Cells, Journal of Biological Chemistry, 295, pp. 2495-2505, (2020)
[5]  
Wang Z., Yan X., CD146, a Multi-Functional Molecule Beyond Adhesion, Cancer Letters, 330, pp. 150-162, (2013)
[6]  
Lehmann J.M., Holzmann B., Breitbart E.W., Schmiegelow P., Riethmuller G., Johnson J.P., Discrimination Between Benign and Malignant Cells of Melanocytic Lineage by Two Novel Antigens, a Glycoprotein With a Molecular Weight of 113 000 and a Protein With a Molecular Weight of 76 000, Cancer Research, 47, pp. 841-845, (1987)
[7]  
Lehmann J.M., Riethmuller G., Johnson J.P., MUC18, a Marker of Tumor Progression in Human Melanoma, Shows Sequence Similarity to the Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules of the Immunoglobulin Superfamily, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 86, pp. 9891-9895, (1989)
[8]  
Shih I.-M., Elder D.E., Speicher D., Johnson J.P., Herlyn M., Isolation and Functional Characterization of the A32 Melanoma-Associated Antigen, Cancer Research, 54, pp. 2514-2520, (1994)
[9]  
Xie S., Luca M., Huang S., Et al., Expression of MCAM/MUC18 by Human Melanoma Cells Leads to Increased Tumor Growth and Metastasis, Cancer Research, 57, pp. 2295-2303, (1997)
[10]  
Shih I.-M., Speicher D., Hsu M.-Y., Levine E., Herlyn M., Melanoma Cell-Cell Interactions Are Mediated Through Heterophilic Mel-CAM/Ligand Adhesion, Cancer Research, 57, pp. 3835-3840, (1997)