Increased invasive behaviour in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma with loss of basement-membrane type VII collagen

VL Martins, JJ Vyas, M Chen, K Purdie… - Journal of cell …, 2009 - journals.biologists.com
VL Martins, JJ Vyas, M Chen, K Purdie, CA Mein, AP South, A Storey, JA McGrath
Journal of cell science, 2009journals.biologists.com
Type VII collagen (ColVII) is the main component of anchoring fibrils, attachment structures
within the lamina densa of the basement membrane that are responsible for attachment of
the epidermis to the dermis in skin. Mutations in the human ColVII gene, COL7A1, cause the
severe inherited blistering disorder recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB)
affecting skin and mucosae, associated with a greatly increased risk of skin cancer. In this
study, we examined the effect of loss of ColVII on squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) …
Type VII collagen (ColVII) is the main component of anchoring fibrils, attachment structures within the lamina densa of the basement membrane that are responsible for attachment of the epidermis to the dermis in skin. Mutations in the human ColVII gene, COL7A1, cause the severe inherited blistering disorder recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB) affecting skin and mucosae, associated with a greatly increased risk of skin cancer. In this study, we examined the effect of loss of ColVII on squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) tumourigenesis using RNAi in a 3D organotypic skin model. Our findings suggest that loss of ColVII promotes SCC migration and invasion as well as regulating cell differentiation with evidence for concomitant promotion of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Immunostaining of RDEB skin and a tissue array of sporadic cutaneous SCCs confirmed that loss of ColVII correlates with decreased involucrin expression in vivo. Gene-expression-array data and immunostaining demonstrated that loss of ColVII increases expression of the chemokine ligand-receptor CXCL10-CXCR3 and downstream-associated PLC signalling, which might contribute to the increased metastatic potential of SCCs with reduced or absent ColVII expression. Together, these findings may explain the aggressive behaviour of SCCs in RDEB patients and may also be relevant to non-RDEB skin cancer, as well as other tumours from organs where ColVII is expressed.
journals.biologists.com