Inactivation of emilin-1 by proteolysis and secretion in small extracellular vesicles favors melanoma progression and metastasis

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Abstract

Several studies have demonstrated that melanoma-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) are involved in lymph node metastasis; however, the molecular mechanisms involved are not completely defined. Here, we found that EMILIN-1 is proteolyzed and secreted in small EVs (sEVs) as a novel mechanism to reduce its intracellular levels favoring metastasis in mouse melanoma lymph node metastatic cells. Interestingly, we observed that EMILIN-1 has intrinsic tumor and metastasis suppressive-like properties reducing effective migration, cell viability, primary tumor growth, and metastasis. Overall, our analysis suggests that the inactivation of EMILIN-1 by proteolysis and secretion in sEVs reduce its intrinsic tumor suppressive activities in melanoma favoring tumor progression and metastasis.

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Amor López, A., Mazariegos, M. S., Capuano, A., Ximénez-Embún, P., Hergueta-Redondo, M., Recio, J. Á., … Peinado, H. (2021). Inactivation of emilin-1 by proteolysis and secretion in small extracellular vesicles favors melanoma progression and metastasis. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(14). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22147406

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