Abstract

Upon removal of stemness factors, a small subpopulation of embryonic stem cells (ESCs) spontaneously extrudes the t-SNARE protein syntaxin-4, which upregulates the cell adhesion molecule P-cadherin and induces the onset of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-like behaviors with loss of stemness in each cell. In this study, we identified a series of molecular elements responsible for this phenomenon using several small-molecule inhibitors and the human embryonic carcinoma cell line, NCCIT. We found that the syntaxin-4-triggered morphological changes and a decrease in stemness signatures were independently induced by the activation of Rho-associated kinase (ROCK) and the abrogation of PI3K/Akt signaling. We also found that the extracellular expression of syntaxin-4 inactivated focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in association with the augmented expression of P-cadherin, and comparable controls of either of these downstream elements of syntaxin-4 accelerated both ROCK-induced F-actin stress fiber formation and P13K/Akt-suppressed loss of stemness signatures. Cells expressing P-cadherin inactivated FAK but FAK inhibition did not affect P-cadherin expression, demonstrating a causal relationship between P-cadherin and FAK in the event of syntaxin-4 induction. These results reveal a novel signaling axis in stem cells and shed new light on the crucial elements for stem cell plasticity and the maintenance of stemness.

Full Text
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