Beta-catenin inhibits melanocyte migration but induces melanoma metastasis

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Abstract

The canonical Wnt signalling pathway induces the β-catenin/lymphoid enhancer factor transcription factors. It is activated in various cancers, most characteristically carcinomas, in which it promotes metastatic spread by increasing migration and/or invasion. The Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway is frequently activated in melanoma, but the presence of β-catenin in the nucleus does not seem to be a sign of aggressiveness in these tumours. We found that, unlike its positive role in stimulating migration and invasion of carcinoma cells, β-catenin signalling decreased the migration of melanocytes and melanoma cell lines. In vivo, β-catenin signalling in melanoblasts reduced the migration of these cells, causing a white belly-spot phenotype. The inhibition by β-catenin of migration was dependent on MITF-M, a key transcription factor of the melanocyte lineage, and CSK, an Src-inhibitor. Despite reducing migration, β-catenin signalling promoted lung metastasis in the NRAS-driven melanoma murine model. Thus, β-catenin may have conflicting roles in the metastatic spread of melanoma, repressing migration while promoting metastasis. These results highlight that metastasis formation requires a series of successful cellular processes, any one of which may not be optimally efficient. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited.

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Gallagher, S. J., Rambow, F., Kumasaka, M., Champeval, D., Bellacosa, A., Delmas, V., & Larue, L. (2013). Beta-catenin inhibits melanocyte migration but induces melanoma metastasis. Oncogene, 32(17), 2230–2238. https://doi.org/10.1038/onc.2012.229

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