Suppression of Ca 2+ signaling enhances melanoma progression.
Scott GrossRobert HooperDhanendra TomarAlexander P ArmsteadNo'ad ShanasPranava MalluHinal JoshiSuravi RayParkson Lee-Gau ChongIgor AstsaturovJeffrey M FarmaKathy Q CaiKumaraswamy Naidu ChitralaJohn W ElrodM Raza ZaidiJonathan SoboloffPublished in: The EMBO journal (2022)
The role of store-operated Ca 2+ entry (SOCE) in melanoma metastasis is highly controversial. To address this, we here examined UV-dependent metastasis, revealing a critical role for SOCE suppression in melanoma progression. UV-induced cholesterol biosynthesis was critical for UV-induced SOCE suppression and subsequent metastasis, although SOCE suppression alone was both necessary and sufficient for metastasis to occur. Further, SOCE suppression was responsible for UV-dependent differences in gene expression associated with both increased invasion and reduced glucose metabolism. Functional analyses further established that increased glucose uptake leads to a metabolic shift towards biosynthetic pathways critical for melanoma metastasis. Finally, examination of fresh surgically isolated human melanoma explants revealed cholesterol biosynthesis-dependent reduced SOCE. Invasiveness could be reversed with either cholesterol biosynthesis inhibitors or pharmacological SOCE potentiation. Collectively, we provide evidence that, contrary to current thinking, Ca 2+ signals can block invasive behavior, and suppression of these signals promotes invasion and metastasis.