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Bone Morphogenic Protein Signaling and Melanoma

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11864-021-00849-w

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Melanoma; BMPs; Stem cells; BRAF; NRAS; Differentation

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Malignant melanoma is a deadly form of skin cancer with low survival rates for metastatic patients. The phenotypic plasticity of melanoma cells allows for rapid development of invasive properties and metastatic tumors, primarily caused by the transition from mature melanocytes to less differentiated progenitor cells due to accumulated mutations targeting signaling pathways. Understanding the role of signaling pathways like TGF-beta and BMPs is crucial for controlling EMT processes and achieving clinical benefits for melanoma patients.
Opinion statement Malignant melanoma is a deadly form of skin cancer caused by neoplastic transformation of melanocytic cells. Despite recent progress in melanoma therapy, by inhibition of activated oncogenes or immunotherapy, survival rate for metastatic melanoma patients remains low. The remarkable phenotypic plasticity of melanoma cells allows for rapid development of invasive properties and metastatic tumors, the main cause of mortality in melanoma patients. Phenotypic and molecular analyses of developing tumors revealed that epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a cellular and molecular mechanism, controls transition from mature melanocyte to less differentiated melanocyte lineage progenitor cells forming melanoma tumors. This transition is facilitated by persistence of transcriptional regulatory circuit characteristic of embryonic stage in mature melanocytes. Switching of the developmental program of mature melanocyte to EMT is induced by accumulated mutations, especially targeting BRAF, N-RAS, or MEK1/2 signaling pathways, and further promoted by dynamic stimuli from local environment including hypoxia, interactions with extracellular matrix and growth factors or cytokines. Recent reports demonstrate that signaling mediated by transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and bone morphogenic proteins (BMPs) play critical roles in inducing EMT by controlling expression of critical transcription factors. BMPs are essential modulators of differentiation, proliferation, apoptosis, invasiveness, and metastases in developing melanoma tumors. They control transcription and epigenetic landscape of melanoma cells. Better understanding of the role of BMPs may lead to new strategies to control EMT processes in melanocyte cell lineage and to achieve clinical benefits for the patients.

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