| Literature DB >> 19921267 |
Samuel Schmidt1, Peter Friedl.
Abstract
Adhesion and migration are integrated cell functions that build, maintain and remodel the multicellular organism. In migrating cells, integrins are the main transmembrane receptors that provide dynamic interactions between extracellular ligands and actin cytoskeleton and signalling machineries. In parallel to integrins, other adhesion systems mediate adhesion and cytoskeletal coupling to the extracellular matrix (ECM). These include multifunctional cell surface receptors (syndecans and CD44) and discoidin domain receptors, which together coordinate ligand binding with direct or indirect cytoskeletal coupling and intracellular signalling. We review the way that the different adhesion systems for ECM components impact cell migration in two- and three-dimensional migration models. We further discuss the hierarchy of these concurrent adhesion systems, their specific tasks in cell migration and their contribution to migration in three-dimensional multi-ligand tissue environments.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19921267 PMCID: PMC2784868 DOI: 10.1007/s00441-009-0892-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Res ISSN: 0302-766X Impact factor: 5.249
Fig. 1Classes of adhesion receptors involved in cell adhesion and migration. Important domains of adhesion receptors and interstitial ECM ligands collagen, fibronectin and hyaluronan are shown
Fig. 2Various migration strategies. Dependent on cell-matrix adhesion strengths and cell contrctility, force generation occurs either via attachment to the ECM substrate and pulling or by cell propulsion. Dependent on the stability of cell-cell adhesion, cells migrate either individually or within multicellular strands (red actin cytoskeleton)
Regulation of cell migration by syndecans (2D two-dimensional, 3D three dimensional)
| Syndecan type | Cell type | Experimental model | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Syndecan-1 | Breast cancer cells | 2D spreading and migration assay; migration through 3D matrigel after overexpression | Increased spreading, adhesion and migration on 2D collagen I; increased cell invasion in 3D Matrigel | Burbach et al. |
| Myeloma cells | In vivo model of experimental metastasis in mice | Increased metastasis and tumour growth | Khotskaya et al. | |
| Syndecan-2 | Intestinal epithelial cells | 2D adhesion and migration after overexpression | Increase of adhesion, spreading on collagen type I (in cooperation with α2β1 integrin) | Choi et al. |
| Colon carcinoma cells | Migration across type-I-collagen-coated surface after overexpression | Increased migration speed | Park et al. | |
| Melanoma cells | Migration through polycarbonate filter (transwell) after overexpression | Increased migration and invasion | Lee et al. | |
| Syndecan-3 | Neuronal cells | Migration through polycarbonate filter (transwell) | Increased migration | Hienola et al. |
| Syndecan-4 | Melanoma cells | Adhesion and migration across fibronectin-coated 2D surface | Increased adhesion and migration | Chalkiadaki et al. |
| Fibroblasts | Adhesion and migration in 3D fibrin-fibronectin-matrix | Increased adhesion and migration | Midwood et al. |