| Literature DB >> 29338098 |
Sara Proietti1,2, Angela Catizone3, Maria Grazia Masiello1,2,4, Simona Dinicola1,2,4, Gianmarco Fabrizi1,2, Mirko Minini1,2,4, Giulia Ricci5, Roberto Verna2,4, Russel J Reiter6, Alessandra Cucina1,2,7, Mariano Bizzarri2,4.
Abstract
Through activation of the ERK pathway, nicotine, in both normal MCF-10A and low-malignant breast cancer cells (MCF7), promotes increased motility and invasiveness. Melatonin antagonizes both these effects by inhibiting almost completely ERK phosphorylation. As melatonin has no effect on nonstimulated cells, it is likely that melatonin can counteract ERK activation only downstream of nicotine-induced activation. This finding suggests that melatonin hampers ERK phosphorylation presumably by targeting a still unknown intermediate factor that connects nicotine stimulation to ERK phosphorylation. Furthermore, downstream of ERK activation, melatonin significantly reduces fascin and calpain activation while restoring normal vinculin levels. Melatonin also counteracts nicotine effects by reshaping the overall cytoskeleton architecture and abolishing invasive membrane protrusion. In addition, melatonin decreases nicotine-dependent ROCK1/ROCK2 activation, thus further inhibiting cell contractility and motility. Melatonin actions are most likely attributable to ERK inhibition, although melatonin could display other ERK-independent effects, namely through a direct modulation of additional molecular and structural factors, including coronin, cofilin, and cytoskeleton components.Entities:
Keywords: ROCK; cofilin; coronin; extracellular signal-regulated kinase; fascin; melatonin; nicotine; vinculin
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29338098 DOI: 10.1111/jpi.12467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pineal Res ISSN: 0742-3098 Impact factor: 13.007