Biomolecules (Aug 2023)

An Extracellular/Membrane-Bound S100P Pool Regulates Motility and Invasion of Human Extravillous Trophoblast Lines and Primary Cells

  • Tara Lancaster,
  • Maral E. A. Tabrizi,
  • Mariaelena Repici,
  • Janesh Gupta,
  • Stephane R. Gross

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13081231
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. 1231

Abstract

Read online

Whilst S100P has been shown to be a marker for carcinogenesis, we have shown, in non-physio-pathological states, that its expression promotes trophoblast motility and invasion but the mechanisms explaining these cellular processes are unknown. Here we identify the presence of S100P in the plasma membrane/cell surface of all trophoblast cells tested, whether lines, primary extravillous (EVT) cells, or section tissue samples using either biochemical purification of plasma membrane material, cell surface protein isolation through biotinylation, or microscopy analysis. Using extracellular loss of function studies, through addition of a specific S100P antibody, our work shows that inhibiting the cell surface/membrane-bound or extracellular S100P pools significantly reduces, but importantly only in part, both cell motility and cellular invasion in different trophoblastic cell lines, as well as primary EVTs. Interestingly, this loss in cellular motility/invasion did not result in changes to the overall actin organisation and focal adhesion complexes. These findings shed new light on at least two newly characterized pathways by which S100P promotes trophoblast cellular motility and invasion. One where cellular S100P levels involve the remodelling of focal adhesions whilst another, an extracellular pathway, appears to be focal adhesion independent. Both pathways could lead to the identification of novel targets that may explain why significant numbers of confirmed human pregnancies suffer complications through poor placental implantation.

Keywords