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Overcoming anoikis – pathways to anchorage-independent growth in cancer

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TLDR
A better understanding of the mechanisms underlying anoikis resistance could help to counteract tumor progression and prevent metastasis formation, which is one of the hallmarks of cancer cells.
Abstract
Anoikis (or cell-detachment-induced apoptosis) is a self-defense strategy that organisms use to eliminate 'misplaced' cells, i.e. cells that are in an inappropriate location. Occasionally, detached or misplaced cells can overcome anoikis and survive for a certain period of time in the absence of the correct signals from the extracellular matrix (ECM). If cells are able to adapt to their new environment, then they have probably become anchorage-independent, which is one of the hallmarks of cancer cells. Anoikis resistance and anchorage-independency allow tumor cells to expand and invade adjacent tissues, and to disseminate through the body, giving rise to metastasis. Thus, overcoming anoikis is a crucial step in a series of changes that a tumor cell undergoes during malignant transformation. Tumor cells have developed a variety of strategies to bypass or overcome anoikis. Some strategies consist of adaptive cellular changes that allow the cells to behave as they would in the correct environment, so that induction of anoikis is aborted. Other strategies aim to counteract the negative effects of anoikis induction by hyperactivating survival and proliferative cascades. The recently discovered processes of autophagy and entosis also highlight the contribution of these mechanisms to rendering the cells in a dormant state until they receive a signal initiated at the ECM, thereby circumventing anoikis. In all situations, the final outcome is the ability of the tumor to grow and metastasize. A better understanding of the mechanisms underlying anoikis resistance could help to counteract tumor progression and prevent metastasis formation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Apoptosis, autophagy, necroptosis, and cancer metastasis

TL;DR: This review summarizes the recent advances in the understanding of the mechanisms by which key regulators of apoptosis, autophagy, and necroptosis participate in cancer metastasis and discusses the crosstalk between apoptosis-autophagy-and-novoptosis involved in the regulation of cancer metastatic processes.
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The Roles of Autophagy in Cancer

TL;DR: The mechanism of autophagy under stressful conditions and its roles in tumor suppression and promotion in cancer and in cancer stem-cells are summarized and how Autophagy is a promising potential therapeutic target in cancer treatment is discussed.
Journal Article

A non-apoptotic cell death process, entosis, that occurs by cell-in-cell invasion.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a non-apoptotic cell death program in matrix-detached cells, termed entosis, that is initiated by a previously unrecognized and unusual process involving the invasion of one cell into another, leading to a transient state in which a live cell is contained within a neighboring host cell.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidative stress induces autophagic cell death independent of apoptosis in transformed and cancer cells.

TL;DR: Two ROS-generating agents, hydrogen peroxide and 2-methoxyestradiol, induced autophagy in the transformed cell line HEK293 and the cancer cell lines U87 and HeLa but failed to induce autophagic cell death in non-transformed cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Suppression of anoikis and induction of metastasis by the neurotrophic receptor TrkB

TL;DR: TrkB, a neurotrophic tyrosine kinase receptor, is identified as a potent and specific suppressor of caspase-associated anoikis of non-malignant epithelial cells and induced the formation of large cellular aggregates that survive and proliferate in suspension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Apoptosis of adherent cells by recruitment of caspase-8 to unligated integrins

TL;DR: Surprisingly, unligated integrin or β integrin tails recruit caspase-8 to the membrane, where it becomes activated in a death receptor–independent manner and increases survival, revealing an unexpected role for integrins in the regulation of apoptosis and tissue remodeling.
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Do cells that metastasize follow anchorage dependence?

Anoikis resistance and anchorage-independency allow tumor cells to expand and invade adjacent tissues, and to disseminate through the body, giving rise to metastasis.