The lipid droplet protein DHRS3 is a regulator of melanoma cell state.

Publication Type Preprint
Authors Johns E, Ma Y, Louphrasitthipol P, Peralta C, Hunter M, Raymond J, Molina H, Goding C, White R
Journal bioRxiv
Date Published 03/28/2024
ISSN 2692-8205
Abstract Lipid droplets are fat storage organelles composed of a protein envelope and lipid rich core. Regulation of this protein envelope underlies differential lipid droplet formation and function. In melanoma, lipid droplet formation has been linked to tumor progression and metastasis, but it is unknown whether lipid droplet proteins play a role. To address this, we performed proteomic analysis of the lipid droplet envelope in melanoma. We found that lipid droplet proteins were differentially enriched in distinct melanoma states; from melanocytic to undifferentiated. DHRS3, which converts all-trans-retinal to all-trans-retinol, is upregulated in the MITFLO/undifferentiated/neural crest-like melanoma cell state and reduced in the MITFHI/melanocytic state. Increased DHRS3 expression is sufficient to drive MITFHI/melanocytic cells to a more undifferentiated/invasive state. These changes are due to retinoic acid mediated regulation of melanocytic genes. Our data demonstrate that melanoma cell state can be regulated by expression of lipid droplet proteins which affect downstream retinoid signaling.
DOI 10.1101/2024.03.25.586589
PubMed ID 38586016
PubMed Central ID PMC10996640
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