GABA regulates electrical activity and tumor initiation in melanoma Journal Article


Authors: Tagore, M.; Hergenreder, E.; Perlee, S. C.; Cruz, N. M.; Menocal, L.; Suresh, S.; Chan, E.; Baron, M.; Melendez, S.; Dave, A.; Chatila, W. K.; Nsengimana, J.; Koche, R. P.; Hollmann, T. J.; Ideker, T.; Studer, L.; Schietinger, A.; White, R. M.
Article Title: GABA regulates electrical activity and tumor initiation in melanoma
Abstract: The neurotransmitter GABA was identified as a mediator of functional communication within the melanoma microenvironment, which highlights the role of electrical activity in melanoma initiation and suggests GABA as a potential therapeutic target in this disease. Oncogenes can initiate tumors only in certain cellular contexts, which is referred to as oncogenic competence. In melanoma, whether cells in the microenvironment can endow such competence remains unclear. Using a combination of zebrafish transgenesis coupled with human tissues, we demonstrate that GABAergic signaling between keratinocytes and melanocytes promotes melanoma initiation by BRAFV600E. GABA is synthesized in melanoma cells, which then acts on GABA-A receptors in keratinocytes. Electron microscopy demonstrates specialized cell-cell junctions between keratinocytes and melanoma cells, and multielectrode array analysis shows that GABA acts to inhibit electrical activity in melanoma/keratinocyte cocultures. Genetic and pharmacologic perturbation of GABA synthesis abrogates melanoma initiation in vivo. These data suggest that GABAergic signaling across the skin microenvironment regulates the ability of oncogenes to initiate melanoma.Significance: This study shows evidence of GABA-mediated regulation of electrical activity between melanoma cells and keratinocytes, providing a new mechanism by which the microenvironment promotes tumor initiation. This provides insights into the role of the skin microenvironment in early melanomas while identifying GABA as a potential therapeutic target in melanoma. See related commentary by Ceol, p. 2128. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 2109Significance: This study shows evidence of GABA-mediated regulation of electrical activity between melanoma cells and keratinocytes, providing a new mechanism by which the microenvironment promotes tumor initiation. This provides insights into the role of the skin microenvironment in early melanomas while identifying GABA as a potential therapeutic target in melanoma. See related commentary by Ceol, p. 2128. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 2109Significance: This study shows evidence of GABA-mediated regulation of electrical activity between melanoma cells and keratinocytes, providing a new mechanism by which the microenvironment promotes tumor initiation. This provides insights into the role of the skin microenvironment in early melanomas while identifying GABA as a potential therapeutic target in melanoma. See related commentary by Ceol, p. 2128. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 2109
Keywords: metastasis; receptor; keratinocytes; expression; cells; gamma-aminobutyric-acid; growth-factor; inhibition; signal-transduction; intercellular communication
Journal Title: Cancer Discovery
Volume: 13
Issue: 10
ISSN: 2159-8274
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2023-10-01
Start Page: 2270
End Page: 2291
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001184452500001
DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.Cd-23-0389
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC10551668
PUBMED: 37553760
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Lorenz Studer
    223 Studer
  2. Richard Mark White
    68 White
  3. Travis Jason Hollmann
    126 Hollmann
  4. Richard Patrick Koche
    177 Koche
  5. Walid Khaled Chatila
    103 Chatila
  6. Mohita Malay Tagore
    7 Tagore
  7. Shruthy Suresh
    8 Suresh
  8. Sarah Catherine Perlee
    6 Perlee
  9. Eric Chan
    12 Chan
  10. Asim Dave
    7 Dave