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Modulation of potassium channel function confers a hyperproliferative invasive phenotype on embryonic stem cells
Author(s) -
Junji Morokuma,
Douglas Blackiston,
Dany Spencer Adams,
Guiscard Seebohm,
Barry A. Trimmer,
Michael Levin
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.0808328105
Subject(s) - biology , embryonic stem cell , neural crest , microbiology and biotechnology , sox10 , stem cell , mitosis , xenopus , morphogenesis , genetics , embryo , gene
Ion transporters, and the resulting voltage gradients and electric fields, have been implicated in embryonic development and regeneration. These biophysical signals are key physiological aspects of the microenvironment that epigenetically regulate stem and tumor cell behavior. Here, we identify a previously unrecognized function for KCNQ1, a potassium channel known to be involved in human Romano–Ward and Jervell–Lange–Nielsen syndromes when mutated. Misexpression of its modulatory wild-type β-subunit XKCNE1 in theXenopus embryo resulted in a striking alteration of the behavior of one type of embryonic stem cell: the pigment cell lineage of the neural crest. Depolarization of embryonic cells by misexpression of KCNE1 non-cell-autonomously induced melanocytes to overproliferate, spread out, and become highly invasive of blood vessels, liver, gut, and neural tube, leading to a deeply hyperpigmented phenotype. This effect is mediated by the up-regulation ofSox10 andSlug genes, thus linking alterations in ion channel function to the control of migration, shape, and mitosis rates during embryonic morphogenesis. Taken together, these data identify a role for the KCNQ1 channel in regulating key cell behaviors and reveal the molecular identity of a biophysical switch, by means of which neoplastic-like properties can be conferred upon a specific embryonic stem cell subpopulation.

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