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Depletion of primary cilium in acral melanoma
Author(s) -
Love Nick R.,
Lang Ursula E.,
Cheung Christine,
Kim Jinah
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of cutaneous pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.597
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1600-0560
pISSN - 0303-6987
DOI - 10.1111/cup.13484
Subject(s) - melanoma , pathology , medicine , cilium , biopsy , immunohistochemistry , dermatology , biology , cancer research , microbiology and biotechnology
Background A eukaryotic cell's primary cilium (PC) is critical for cell signaling, migration and homeostasis. Primary cilium dysfunction has been demonstrated in several malignancies, but whether primary cilia loss occurs in acral melanoma has remained unknown. To address this, we examined the ciliation index (% melanocytes containing a PC) of patient‐derived, biopsy‐proven acral melanoma and compared these to benign acral nevi. Methods We generated a pilot initiative study that included six acral melanomas and seven acral nevi derived from the foot. Using fluorescent immunohistochemistry, we calculated ciliation indexes of Sox10+ melanocytes. Results Average ciliation index for acral nevi was 74.0% (SE of the mean [SEM] 3.3%) vs 9.3% for acral melanoma (SEM 5.7%), finding a statistically significant difference between the groups ( P ‐value <.001, two tailed t test). Conclusion The data show a significant loss of primary cilia in malignant acral melanoma vs benign acral nevi, suggesting that cilia may play an important role during acral melanoma formation. Our data, which should be validated by a larger study with longer follow‐up period, suggest that examining ciliation index may be a useful diagnostic test when distinguishing benign acral nevi from melanoma.

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