4.5 Article

Smad7 restricts melanoma invasion by restoring N-cadherin expression and establishing heterotypic cell-cell interactions in vivo

Journal

PIGMENT CELL & MELANOMA RESEARCH
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 795-808

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-148X.2010.00758.x

Keywords

metastatic melanoma; Smad7; beta-catenin; N-cadherin; human skin grafts

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1RO1CA100443-01A1]

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P>The list of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta)-related proteins in non-canonical TGF-beta signaling is growing. Examples include receptor-Smads directing micro-RNA processing and inhibitory-Smads, e.g. Smad7, directing cell adhesion. Human skin grafts with fluorescently tagged melanoma cells revealed Smad7-expressing cells positioned themselves proximal to the dermal-epidermal junction and failed to form tumors, while control cells readily invaded and formed tumors within the dermis. Smad7 significantly inhibited beta-catenin T41/S45 phosphorylation associated with degradation and induced a 4.5-fold increase in full-length N-cadherin. Cell adhesion assays confirmed a strong interaction between Smad7-expressing cells and primary dermal fibroblasts mediated via N-cadherin, while control cells were incapable of such interaction. Immunofluorescent analysis of skin grafts indicated N-cadherin homotypic interaction at the surface of both Smad7 cells and primary dermal fibroblasts, in contrast to control melanoma cells. We propose that Smad7 suppresses beta-catenin degradation and promotes interaction with N-cadherin, stabilizing association with neighboring dermal fibroblasts, thus mitigating invasion.

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