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Publication : Expression of snail in epidermal keratinocytes promotes cutaneous inflammation and hyperplasia conducive to tumor formation.

First Author  Du F Year  2010
Journal  Cancer Res Volume  70
Issue  24 Pages  10080-9
PubMed ID  21159631 Mgi Jnum  J:167607
Mgi Id  MGI:4868635 Doi  10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-10-0324
Citation  Du F, et al. (2010) Expression of snail in epidermal keratinocytes promotes cutaneous inflammation and hyperplasia conducive to tumor formation. Cancer Res 70(24):10080-9
abstractText  Although metastasis is the most lethal consequence of tumor progression, comparatively little is known regarding the molecular machinery governing this process. In many carcinomas, there is a robust correlation between the expression of the transcription factor Snail and a poor prognosis, but the contribution of this protein to the metastatic process remains unresolved. Interestingly, the prolonged expression of Snail in epidermal keratinocytes is sufficient to recapitulate early features of metastasis. However, it does so without inducing a complete epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a developmental phenomenon mediated by Snail that is extensively invoked as the mechanism fueling tumorigenesis. Instead, we found that the local invasiveness of keratinocytes is the consequence of the recruitment and activity of macrophages. Moreover, keratinocyte proliferation is the product of an IL-17/IL-6/Stat3 signaling module initiated by activated resident gammadeltaT cells in the transgenic skin. Together, these phenotypes prime the transgenic skin for the formation and metastasis of tumors in response to chemically induced carcinogenesis. Thus, the contribution of Snail to the progression of carcinomas is largely through the creation of a hyperproliferative and inflammatory niche that facilitates tumor development and dissemination.
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