Role of ADAM‐15 in wound healing and melanoma development

2012 
:  Proteins of the a disintegrin and metalloprotease (ADAM) family are transmembrane proteins involved in ectodomain shedding and in cellular interactions. In skin, ADAM-15 is detected in the epidermis and dermal vascular structures by immunolocalization. Expression is also detected in isolated fibroblast, keratinocytes and endothelial cells in culture. Despite high expression of ADAM-15 throughout the wound repair process, wound healing experiments in vivo revealed a dispensable role of ADAM-15 for the healing process. No alterations in wound closure, re-epithelialization, contraction, scar formation and angiogenesis were detected in animals carrying ADAM-15−/− deletion. When analysing melanoma development by grafting melanoma cells into the flank of ADAM-15−/−, no significant alteration in tumor growth was detected. However, at later stages, melanomas in the ADAM-15−/− animals were smaller than those grown in WT animals. At all time points, no significant differences in vascularization of the peritumoral stroma and tumors were detected. Interestingly, we could detect a reduced number of metastasized lungs and lymph nodes in ADAM-15−/− animals as compared to control littermate mice. In conclusion, our study indicated that ADAM-15 is dispensable for cutaneous wound healing and B16F1 melanoma growth, but significantly contributes to metastasis formation.
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