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Tumor Protein D54 (TPD54) regulates intracellular protein trafficking, cellular function and disease progression in melanoma

Bonder, C. S.; Ortiz, M.; Ffrench, C. B.; Webb, S.; Toubia, J.; Nataren, N. J.; Dorward, E. L.; Myo Min, K. K.; Lonic, A.; Arts, P.; Cockshell, M. P.; Mahoney, M. G.; Ebert, L. M.; Khew-Goodall, Y.

2026-05-12 cancer biology
10.64898/2026.05.07.721771 bioRxiv
Show abstract

To facilitate survival, migration and evasion of immune surveillance, cancer cells tightly coordinate the synthesis and trafficking of a diverse repertoire of proteins to their cell surface and the surrounding tumor microenvironment. A key mechanism underlying this process is the intracellular membrane trafficking pathways, including vesicular transport systems. There remains a paucity of mechanistic insight into the regulatory components that mediate nascent protein trafficking and their dysregulation in cancer. Herein, we investigate Tumor Protein D54 (TPD54) as a central regulator of intracellular protein transport that is exploited by melanoma cells to promote disease progression. Integrative analyses of patient-derived tumor tissue specimens show that the expression of TPD52L2 (the gene encoding TPD54) is frequently overexpressed in melanoma and correlates with adverse clinical outcomes, including reduced responses to immune checkpoint blockade. Mechanistic investigations further revealed that TPD54 maintains Golgi integrity and orchestrates trafficking of early endosomes, anterograde vesicles and extracellular vesicles. Functionally, TPD54 augments the secretion of pro-cancerous cytokines, increases the cell surface expression of adhesion-signaling receptors (e.g. integrin-{beta}1 and desmoglein-2), promotes melanoma cell migration and elevates their capability to undergo vasculogenic mimicry. Targeting TPD52L2 in two mouse models of melanoma (B16-F10 and HCmel12) showed significant attenuation of tumor growth, disrupted tumor vasculature, enhanced anti-tumor immunity with infiltration of CD8+ T cells and reduced metastatic disease. Collectively, these findings establish TPD54 as a critical and previously underappreciated regulator of protein trafficking in cancer cells that directly contributes to disease progression and highlights its potential as a novel therapeutic target to combat melanoma.

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