Basal-cell adhesion molecule (B-CAM) is induced in epithelial skin tumors and inflammatory epidermis, and is expressed at cell-cell and cell-substrate contact sites

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Abstract

Basal-cell adhesion molecule (B-CAM) is a 90 kDa cell surface glycoprotein of the immunoglobulin superfamily that functions as a laminin-binding receptor. B-CAM is upregulated following malignant transformation of some cell types in vivo and in vitro, thus being a candidate molecule involved in tumor progression. As cutaneous distribution and function of B-CAM are largely unknown, we have studied its expression and regulation in normal and diseased human skin. In normal skin, B-CAM was expressed by endothelial cells of dermal blood vessels. In contrast, B-CAM was strongly upregulated within the tumor tissue of both malignant and benign epithelial skin tumors, including basal cell carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, keratoacanthomas, and common watts. Transformation-associated upregulation was confirmed in vitro, but normal keratinocytes also expressed B-CAM under culture conditions. Interestingly, the basal epidermal layer of normal-appearing skin surrounding the tumors also expressed B-CAM, and B-CAM were induced on the basal and apicolateral surfaces of basal keratinocytes in inflammatory skin disorders suggesting transformation-independent mechanisms of epidermal induction of the B-CAM. Immunoelectron microscopy studies of cultured transformed keratinocytes revealed that B-CAM was expressed at cell-cell and cell-substrate contact sites. Halting proliferation of transformed keratinocytes through cytostatic drugs resulted in decreased B-CAM synthesis. Likewise, inducing terminal differentiation in keratinocyte cultures by increasing the Ca2+ concentration in the medium decreased B-CAM expression. In contrast, both ultraviolet A and B irradiation of cultured human keratinocytes resulted in significantly increased expression of the B-CAM. Overall, it appears that B-CAM expression in human skin is associated with activated states of keratinocytes, and that B-CAM may be involved in cell-cell adhesion or migration, in addition to its known function as a laminin receptor.

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Schön, M., Klein, C. E., Hogenkamp, V., Kaufmann, R., Wienrich, B. G., & Schön, M. P. (2000). Basal-cell adhesion molecule (B-CAM) is induced in epithelial skin tumors and inflammatory epidermis, and is expressed at cell-cell and cell-substrate contact sites. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 115(6), 1047–1053. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1523-1747.2000.00189.x

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