Signaling from the human melanocortin 1 receptor to ERK1 and ERK2 mitogen-activated protein kinases involves transactivation of cKIT.
Herraiz. Cecilia C; Journé. Fabrice F; Abdel-Malek. Zalfa Z; Ghanem. Ghanem G; Jiménez-Cervantes. Celia C; García-Borrón. José C JC
Key Findings
- MC1R activation by α‑MSH (melanotan‑I) triggers ERK signaling via cKIT transactivation, not via cAMP
- The ERK activation occurs in both normal and mutant MC1R forms, including red‑hair variants
- Src kinase mediates the cKIT transactivation, while PKC is not involved
Practical Outcomes
- Melanotan‑I may stimulate cell‑growth pathways beyond pigment production, which could affect skin health and possibly cancer risk. Users should consider this signaling effect when deciding on dosing or long‑term use, and monitor skin changes. No specific dosing changes are recommended yet, but the mechanism suggests caution and further research.
Summary
The study shows that the skin‑color receptor MC1R, which melanotan‑I (a synthetic α‑MSH peptide) activates, can turn on a cell‑growth pathway (ERK) by hijacking another receptor called cKIT, and it does this without using the usual cAMP route. This happens even in people with red‑hair MC1R variants, and it doesn’t involve protein kinase C.
Abstract
Melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R), a Gs protein-coupled receptor expressed in melanocytes, is a major determinant of skin pigmentation, phototype and cancer risk. Upon stimulation by αMSH, MC1R triggers the cAMP and ERK1/ERK2 MAPK pathways. In mouse melanocytes, ERK activation by αMSH binding to Mc1r depends on cAMP, and melanocytes are considered a paradigm for cAMP-dependent ERK activation. However, human MC1R variants associated with red hair, fair skin [red hair color (RHC) phenotype], and increased skin cancer risk display reduced cAMP signaling but activate ERKs as efficiently as wild type in heterologous cells, suggesting independent signaling to ERKs and cAMP in human melanocytes. We show that MC1R signaling activated the ERK pathway in normal human melanocytes and melanoma cells expressing physiological levels of endogenous RHC variants. ERK activation was comparable for wild-type and mutant MC1R and was independent on cAMP because it was neither triggered by stimulation of cAMP synthesis with forskolin nor blocked by the adenylyl cyclase inhibitor 2',5'-dideoxyadenosine. Stimulation of MC1R with αMSH did not lead to protein kinase C activation and ERK activation was unaffected by protein kinase C inhibitors. Conversely, pharmacological interference, small interfering RNA studies, expression profiles, and functional reconstitution experiments showed that αMSH-induced ERK activation resulted from Src tyrosine kinase-mediated transactivation of the stem cell factor receptor, a receptor tyrosine kinase essential for proliferation, differentiation, and survival of melanocyte precursors, thus demonstrating a functional link between the stem cell factor receptor and MC1R. Moreover, this transactivation phenomenon is unique because it is unaffected by natural mutations impairing canonical MC1R signaling through the cAMP pathway.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-11-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/me.2010-0217
100
89