| Literature DB >> 36229674 |
Julien Ablain1,2, Amira Al Mahi3, Harriet Rothschild4, Meera Prasad4, Sophie Aires3, Song Yang4, Maxim E Dokukin5,6, Shuyun Xu7, Michelle Dang4, Igor Sokolov5, Christine G Lian7, Leonard I Zon4,8,9.
Abstract
Cancer genetics has uncovered many tumor-suppressor and oncogenic pathways, but few alterations have revealed mechanisms involved in tumor spreading. Here, we examined the role of the third most significant chromosomal deletion in human melanoma that inactivates the adherens junction gene NECTIN1 in 55% of cases. We found that NECTIN1 loss stimulates melanoma cell migration in vitro and spreading in vivo in both zebrafish and human tumors specifically in response to decreased IGF1 signaling. In human melanoma biopsy specimens, adherens junctions were seen exclusively in areas with low IGF1 levels, but not in NECTIN1-deficient tumors. Our study establishes NECTIN1 as a major determinant of melanoma dissemination and uncovers a genetic control of the response to microenvironmental signals.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36229674 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-022-01191-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 41.307