scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Filopodia and adhesion in cancer cell motility

TLDR
Data implicated that several different filopodia inducing genes may contribute in a collective manner to cancer progression and the high metastasis rates associated with basal-type breast carcinomas.
Abstract
Slender bundled actin containing plasma membrane protrusions, called filopodia, are important for many essential cellular processes like cell adhesion, migration, angiogenesis and the formation of cell-cell contacts. In migrating cells, filopodia are the pioneers at the leading edge which probe the environment for cues. Integrins are cell surface adhesion receptors critically implicated in cell migration and they are transported actively to filopodia tips by an unconventional myosin, myosin-X. Integrin mediated adhesion stabilizes filopodia and promotes cell migration even though integrins are not essential for filopodia initiation. Myosin-X binds also PIP3 and this regulates its activation and localization to filopodia. Filopodia stimulate cell migration in many cell types and increased filopodia density has been described in cancer. Furthermore, several proteins implicated in filopodia formation, like fascin, are also relevant for cancer progression. To investigate this further, we performed a meta-analysis of the expression profiles of 10 filopodia-linked genes in human breast cancer. These data implicated that several different filopodia inducing genes may contribute in a collective manner to cancer progression and the high metastasis rates associated with basal-type breast carcinomas.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Rho GTPase signalling in cell migration.

TL;DR: Recent advances in understanding of how Rho GTPases contribute to different types of migration are reviewed, comparing lamellipodium-driven versus bleb-driven migration modes and how cells migrate across the endothelium is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Macrophages, Foreign Body Giant Cells and Their Response to Implantable Biomaterials

TL;DR: Having a better understanding of the role of macrophages in the tissue healing processes, especially in events that follow biomaterial implantation, can design novel biomaterials-based tissue-engineered constructs that elicit a favorable immune response upon implantation and perform for their intended applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Filopodia in cell adhesion, 3D migration and cancer cell invasion.

TL;DR: This review discusses recent advances demonstrating that filopodia are involved in substrate tethering and environment sensing in vivo and the emerging role offilopodial proteins in tumor dissemination as mounting in vitro and in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Signaling networks of Rho GTPases in cell motility

TL;DR: The upstream and downstream players from Rho GTPases that are mainly involved in actin polymerization leading to cell motility and potentially playing a role in cancer cell metastasis are summarized.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Gene expression patterns of breast carcinomas distinguish tumor subclasses with clinical implications

TL;DR: Survival analyses on a subcohort of patients with locally advanced breast cancer uniformly treated in a prospective study showed significantly different outcomes for the patients belonging to the various groups, including a poor prognosis for the basal-like subtype and a significant difference in outcome for the two estrogen receptor-positive groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrins: Bidirectional, Allosteric Signaling Machines

TL;DR: Current structural and cell biological data suggest models for how integrins transmit signals between their extracellular ligand binding adhesion sites and their cytoplasmic domains, which link to the cytoskeleton and to signal transduction pathways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wnt/beta-catenin signaling in development and disease.

TL;DR: A remarkable interdisciplinary effort has unraveled the WNT (Wingless and INT-1) signal transduction cascade over the last two decades, finding that Germline mutations in the Wnt pathway cause several hereditary diseases, and somatic mutations are associated with cancer of the intestine and a variety of other tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Taking Cell-Matrix Adhesions to the Third Dimension

TL;DR: These distinctive in vivo 3D-matrix adhesions differ in structure, localization, and function from classically described in vitro adhesion, and as such they may be more biologically relevant to living organisms.
Related Papers (5)