PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Plakophilin3 loss leads to an increase in PRL3 levels promoting K8 dephosphorylation, which is required for transformation and metastasis.

  • Nileema Khapare,
  • Samrat T Kundu,
  • Lalit Sehgal,
  • Mugdha Sawant,
  • Rashmi Priya,
  • Prajakta Gosavi,
  • Neha Gupta,
  • Hunain Alam,
  • Madhura Karkhanis,
  • Nishigandha Naik,
  • Milind M Vaidya,
  • Sorab N Dalal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038561
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
p. e38561

Abstract

Read online

The desmosome anchors keratin filaments in epithelial cells leading to the formation of a tissue wide IF network. Loss of the desmosomal plaque protein plakophilin3 (PKP3) in HCT116 cells, leads to an increase in neoplastic progression and metastasis, which was accompanied by an increase in K8 levels. The increase in levels was due to an increase in the protein levels of the Phosphatase of Regenerating Liver 3 (PRL3), which results in a decrease in phosphorylation on K8. The increase in PRL3 and K8 protein levels could be reversed by introduction of an shRNA resistant PKP3 cDNA. Inhibition of K8 expression in the PKP3 knockdown clone S10, led to a decrease in cell migration and lamellipodia formation. Further, the K8 PKP3 double knockdown clones showed a decrease in colony formation in soft agar and decreased tumorigenesis and metastasis in nude mice. These results suggest that a stabilisation of K8 filaments leading to an increase in migration and transformation may be one mechanism by which PKP3 loss leads to tumor progression and metastasis.