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Molecular mechanisms of melanoma metastasis

✍ Scribed by Menashe Bar-Eli


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
99 KB
Volume
173
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


The molecular changes associated with the transition of melanoma cells from radial growth phase to vertical growth phase (metastatic phenotype) are not very well defined. Expression of the tyrosine-kinase receptor c-KIT progressively decreases during local tumor growth and invasion of human melanomas. To provide direct evidence that c-KIT plays a role in metastasis of human melanoma, we transfected the c-KIT gene into c-KIT-negative, highly metastatic human melanoma cells and subsequently analyzed their tumorigenic and metastatic potential in nude mice. Enforced c-KIT expression significantly inhibited tumor growth and metastasis. Exposure of c-KIT-positive melanoma cells in vitro and in vivo to stem cell factor (SCF), the ligand for c-KIT, triggered apoptosis of these cells but not of normal melanocytes. These results suggest that the loss of c-KIT receptor may allow malignant melanoma cells to escape SCF/c-KIT-mediated apoptosis, thus contributing to tumor growth and eventually metastasis. The expression of c-KIT and other genes associated with malignant melanoma (such as MCAM/MUC18) is highly regulated by the transcription factor AP-2. The AP-2 protein is not expressed in malignant melanoma cells. Therefore, loss of AP-2 expression might be a crucial event in the progression of human melanoma.


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