Investigating the epidermal microenvironment in melanoblast migration and invasion: a novel approach to understanding invasive melanoma

NIH RePORTER · NIH · F30 · $51,752 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Melanoma, while composing only 1% of all skin cancers, causes the majority of skin cancer related deaths. In the United States alone, over 100,000 new patients have been diagnosed with melanoma in 2021. While plastic surgeons are frequently responsible for the oncologic reconstruction and removal of melanoma, few surgeons in this field have the basic science training needed to understand the underlying molecular defects of this condition or the dynamics of the mammalian epidermal microenvironment, in which they specialize. Such knowledge is crucial for a holistic approach to the field of plastic surgery because the dysregulation of intercellular communication between cells in this skin microenvironment, such as melanocytes, fibroblasts, and keratinocytes, leads to various aesthetic and life altering defects such as those seen in vitiligo, keloid formation and melanoma. We believe that a better understanding of developmental melanoblast migration can provide a framework for future patient interventions and provide much needed context for future surgeons. This belief is supported by recent studies in human melanoma, which show that the transcriptomic genetic profile of melanoma cells closely mimic developmental melanoblasts. Second, it is well established that one of the hallmarks of malignant melanoma is the loss of E-cadherin and upregulation of N-cadherin, but how adhesive interactions between melanocytes and their surrounding keratinocytes via E-cadherin regulate melanocyte behavior and homeostasis is not well understood. I hypothesize that melanocytes form specialized adhesions with keratinocytes that serve to maintain the epidermal barrier while simultaneously promoting melanocyte migration, colonization, and retention within the epidermis. I plan to test this hypothesis, by using the Cre-Lox system under the control of a K14 epithelial promoter to selectively label melanocytes and knockout E-cadherin in the keratinocyte microenvironment of the epidermis. I will then characterize the impact of disrupted melanocyte-epithelial adhesions on melanocyte migration, protrusivity and colonization (Aim 1), identify the composition and localization of melanocyte-epidermal adhesions and actin regulators (Aim 2) and determine the impact of disrupted melanocyte-epithelial AJs on melanoma progression in a melanoma mouse model (Aim 3). This proposed project will be the first of its kind to characterize the impact of the surrounding keratinocyte microenvironment on melanoblast migration and function; thus, seeing the epidermis as a complex microenvironment with varying cell types, a biological reality that is often overlooked in medical training. This proposed project and the training plan herein is designed to cultivate the necessary training to provide an increase in translational research to the field of plastic surgery. This collaboration between Princeton University and Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Department of Plastic Surgery provides the c...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10537221
Project number
1F30AR081690-01
Recipient
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Denay Richards
Activity code
F30
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$51,752
Award type
1
Project period
2023-01-01 → 2027-12-31