Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Snail maintains the stem/progenitor state of skin epithelial cells and carcinomas through the autocrine effect of matricellular protein Mindin.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

September 20, 2022

Journal

Cell reports

Volume/Issue

40/12

ISSN

2211-1247

Preservation of a small population of cancer stem cells (CSCs) within a heterogeneous carcinoma serves as a paradigm to understand how select cells in a tissue maintain their undifferentiated status. In both embryogenesis and cancer, Snail has been correlated with stemness, but the molecular underpinning of this phenomenon remains largely ill-defined. In models of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC), we discovered a non-epithelial-mesenchymal transition function for the transcription factor Snail in maintaining the stemness of epidermal keratinocytes. Snail-expressing cells secrete the matricellular protein Mindin, which functions in an autocrine fashion to activate a Src-STAT3 pathway to reinforce their stem/progenitor phenotype. This pathway is activated by the engagement of Mindin with the leukocyte-specific integrin, CD11b (ITGAM), which is also unexpectedly expressed by epidermal keratinocytes. Interestingly, disruption of this signaling module in human cSCC attenuates tumorigenesis, suggesting that targeting Mindin would be a promising therapeutic approach to hinder cancer recurrence.

Alternate Journal

Cell Rep

PubMed ID

36130502

Authors

Krithika Badarinath
Binita Dam
Sunny Kataria
Ravindra K Zirmire
Rakesh Dey
Gaurav Kansagara
Johan Ajnabi
Akshay Hegde
Randhir Singh
Tafheem Masudi
Janani Sambath
Sasikala P Sachithanandan
Prashant Kumar
Akash Gulyani
You-Wen He
Sudhir Krishna
Colin Jamora

Keywords

Epithelial Cells
Integrins
Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
Humans
Skin Neoplasms
Extracellular Matrix Proteins
Snail Family Transcription Factors
Neoplasm Proteins
Cell Line, Tumor
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
Neoplastic Stem Cells