Publication | Open Access
Snail maintains the stem/progenitor state of skin epithelial cells and carcinomas through the autocrine effect of matricellular protein Mindin
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Citations
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References
2022
Year
Cell ProliferationDermatologyTranscription Factor SnailCellular PhysiologyAutocrine EffectMatrix BiologyStem CellsSmall PopulationHealth SciencesSkin DevelopmentCutaneous BiologyCancer RecurrenceMorphogenesisCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentLineage PlasticityDevelopmental BiologyMatricellular Protein MindinCell-matrix InteractionSkin Epithelial CellsWound HealingSystems BiologyMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Preservation of a small population of cancer stem cells (CSCs) within a heterogeneous carcinoma serves as a paradigm to understand how select cells in a tissue maintain their undifferentiated status. In both embryogenesis and cancer, Snail has been correlated with stemness, but the molecular underpinning of this phenomenon remains largely ill-defined. In models of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC), we discovered a non-epithelial-mesenchymal transition function for the transcription factor Snail in maintaining the stemness of epidermal keratinocytes. Snail-expressing cells secrete the matricellular protein Mindin, which functions in an autocrine fashion to activate a Src-STAT3 pathway to reinforce their stem/progenitor phenotype. This pathway is activated by the engagement of Mindin with the leukocyte-specific integrin, CD11b (ITGAM), which is also unexpectedly expressed by epidermal keratinocytes. Interestingly, disruption of this signaling module in human cSCC attenuates tumorigenesis, suggesting that targeting Mindin would be a promising therapeutic approach to hinder cancer recurrence.
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