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Título
Differential role of the RasGEFs Sos1 and Sos2 in mouse skin homeostasis and carcinogenesis
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
RasGEFs
Sos1
Sos2
Skin tumors
Fecha de publicación
2018
Editor
Taylor and Francis Group
Citación
Liceras-Boillos, P., Jimeno, D., García-Navas, R., Francisco Lorenzo-Martín, Menacho-Marquez, M., Segrelles, C., Gómez, C., Calzada, N., Fuentes-Mateos, R., Paramio, J. M., Bustelo, X. R., Baltanás, F. C., & Santos, E. (2018). Differential role of the RasGEFs Sos1 and Sos2 in mouse skin homeostasis and carcinogenesis. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 38(16). https://doi.org/10.1128/MCB.00049-18
Resumen
[EN]ABSTRACT Using Sos1 knockout (Sos1-KO), Sos2-KO, and Sos1/2 double-knockout
(Sos1/2-DKO) mice, we assessed the functional role of Sos1 and Sos2 in skin homeostasis under physiological and/or pathological conditions. Sos1 depletion resulted in
significant alterations of skin homeostasis, including reduced keratinocyte proliferation, altered hair follicle and blood vessel integrity in dermis, and reduced adipose
tissue in hypodermis. These defects worsened significantly when both Sos1 and Sos2
were absent. Simultaneous Sos1/2 disruption led to severe impairment of the ability
to repair skin wounds, as well as to almost complete ablation of the neutrophilmediated inflammatory response in the injury site. Furthermore, Sos1 disruption delayed the onset of tumor initiation, decreased tumor growth, and prevented malignant progression of papillomas in a DMBA (7,12-dimethylbenz[]anthracene)/TPA
(12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate)-induced skin carcinogenesis model. Finally,
Sos1 depletion in preexisting chemically induced papillomas resulted also in decreased tumor growth, probably linked to significantly reduced underlying keratinocyte proliferation. Our data unveil novel, distinctive mechanistic roles of Sos 1 and
Sos2 in physiological control of skin homeostasis and wound repair, as well as in
pathological development of chemically induced skin tumors. These observations
underscore the essential role of Sos proteins in cellular proliferation and migration
and support the consideration of these RasGEFs as potential biomarkers/therapy targets in Ras-driven epidermal tumors.
URI
DOI
10.1128/MCB.00049-18
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