Published April 12, 2018
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Wnt5a signaling induced phosphorylation increases APT1 activity and promotes melanoma metastatic behavior
Creators
- 1. University of Pennsylvania
- 2. University of Chicago
Description
Wnt5a has been implicated in melanoma progression and metastasis, although the exact downstream signaling events that contribute to melanoma metastasis are poorly understood. Wnt5a signaling results in acyl protein thioesterase 1 (APT1) mediated depalmitoylation of prometastatic cell adhesion molecules CD44 and MCAM, resulting in increased melanoma invasion. The mechanistic details that underlie Wnt5a-mediated regulation of APT1 activity and cellular function remain unknown. Here, we show Wnt5a signaling regulates APT1 activity through induction of APT1 phosphorylation and we further investigate the functional role of APT1 phosphorylation on its depalmitoylating activity. We found phosphorylation increased APT1 depalmitoylating activity and reduced APT1 dimerization. We further determined APT1 phosphorylation increases melanoma invasion in vitro, and also correlated with increased tumor grade and metastasis. Our results further establish APT1 as an important regulator of melanoma invasion and metastatic behavior. Inhibition of APT1 may represent a novel way to treat Wnt5a driven cancers.
Data availability
The following data sets were generated:
Sadeghi RS Kulej K Kathayat RS Garcia BA Dickinson BC Brady DC Witze E (2018) Wnt5a Signaling in melanoma progression and metastasis Available at the CHORUS database (access to the data requires creating a free-account). https://chorusproject.org/pages/dashboard.html#/projects/all?q=1456
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.7554/eLife.34362
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:10027
Funding
- National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
- AI118891
- National Cancer Institute
- CA181633
- American Cancer Society
- RSG-15-027-01
- American Cancer Society
- IRG –78-002-34