posted on 2025-05-09, 20:03authored byAndrea Lampis, Jens C. Hahne, Luigi Terracciano, Owen J. Sansom, Carlos D. Martins, Gabriela Kramer-Marek, Carlo M. Croce, Chiara Braconi, Matteo Fassan, Nicola Valeri, Pierluigi Gasparini, Luciano Cascione, Somaieh Hedayat, Georgios Vlachogiannis, Caludio Murgia, Eelsa Fontana, Joanna Edwards, Paul G. Horgan
Junctional adhesion molecules (JAMs) play a critical role in cell permeability, polarity and migration. JAM-A, a key protein of the JAM family, is altered in a number of conditions including cancer; however, consequences of JAM-A dysregulation on carcinogenesis appear to be tissue dependent and organ dependent with significant implications for the use of JAM-A as a biomarker or therapeutic target. Here, we test the expression and prognostic role of JAM-A downregulation in primary and metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) (n = 947). We show that JAM-A downregulation is observed in ~60% of CRC and correlates with poor outcome in four cohorts of stages II and III CRC (n = 1098). Using JAM-A knockdown, re-expression and rescue experiments in cell line monolayers, 3D spheroids, patient-derived organoids and xenotransplants, we demonstrate that JAM-A silencing promotes proliferation and migration in 2D and 3D cell models and increases tumour volume and metastases in vivo. Using gene-expression and proteomic analyses, we show that JAM-A downregulation results in the activation of ERK, AKT and ROCK pathways and leads to decreased bone morphogenetic protein 7 expression. We identify MIR21 upregulation as the cause of JAM-A downregulation and show that JAM-A rescue mitigates the effects of MIR21 overexpression on cancer phenotype. Our results identify a novel molecular loop involving MIR21 dysregulation, JAM-A silencing and activation of multiple oncogenic pathways in promoting invasiveness and metastasis in CRC.
History
Journal title
Cell Death and Differentiation
Volume
28
Pagination
2970-2982
Publisher
Springer
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing
School
School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy
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