Title
The ADAM17 sheddase complex regulator iTAP/Frmd8 modulates inflammation and tumor growth
Authors
Marina Badenes, Emma Burbridge, Ioanna Oikonomidi , Abdulbasit Amin, Érika de Carvalho, Lindsay Kosack, Camila Mariano, Pedro Domingos, Pedro Faísca, and Colin Adrain
Institution
Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Oeiras, Portugal
Country
Portugal
Year
2023
Journal
Life Science Alliance
Abstract
The metalloprotease ADAM17 is a sheddase of key molecules, including TNF and epidermal growth factor receptor ligands. ADAM17 exists within an assemblage, the "sheddase complex," containing a rhomboid pseudoprotease (iRhom1 or iRhom2). iRhoms control multiple aspects of ADAM17 biology. The FERM domain-containing protein iTAP/Frmd8 is an iRhom-binding protein that prevents the precocious shunting of ADAM17 and iRhom2 to lysosomes and their consequent degradation. As pathophysiological role(s) of iTAP/Frmd8 have not been addressed, we characterized the impact of iTAP/Frmd8 loss on ADAM17-associated phenotypes in mice. We show that iTAP/Frmd8 KO mice exhibit defects in inflammatory and intestinal epithelial barrier repair functions, but not the collateral defects associated with global ADAM17 loss. Furthermore, we show that iTAP/Frmd8 regulates cancer cell growth in a cell-autonomous manner and by modulating the tumor microenvironment. Our work suggests that pharmacological intervention at the level of iTAP/Frmd8 may be beneficial to target ADAM17 activity in specific compartments during chronic inflammatory diseases or cancer, while avoiding the collateral impact on the vital functions associated with the widespread inhibition of ADAM17.
Product use
Isolation and culture of keratinocytes
Tissue type
Epidermal
Tissue info
keratinocytes
Species
Mouse

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