Literature DB >> 25342560

Competition between human cells by entosis.

Qiang Sun1, Tianzhi Luo2, Yixin Ren2, Oliver Florey3, Senji Shirasawa4, Takehiko Sasazuki5, Douglas N Robinson2, Michael Overholtzer6.   

Abstract

Human carcinomas are comprised of complex mixtures of tumor cells that are known to compete indirectly for nutrients and growth factors. Whether tumor cells could also compete directly, for example by elimination of rivals, is not known. Here we show that human cells can directly compete by a mechanism of engulfment called entosis. By entosis, cells are engulfed, or cannibalized while alive, and subsequently undergo cell death. We find that the identity of engulfing ("winner") and engulfed ("loser") cells is dictated by mechanical deformability controlled by RhoA and actomyosin, where tumor cells with high deformability preferentially engulf and outcompete neighboring cells with low deformability in heterogeneous populations. We further find that activated Kras and Rac signaling impart winner status to cells by downregulating contractile myosin, allowing for the internalization of neighboring cells that eventually undergo cell death. Finally, we compute the energy landscape of cell-in-cell formation, demonstrating that a mechanical differential between winner and loser cells is required for entosis to proceed. These data define a mechanism of competition in mammalian cells that occurs in human tumors.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25342560      PMCID: PMC4220161          DOI: 10.1038/cr.2014.138

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Res        ISSN: 1001-0602            Impact factor:   25.617


  49 in total

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5.  Differential mitotic rates and patterns of growth in compartments in the Drosophila wing.

Authors:  P Simpson; G Morata
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  1981-07-30       Impact factor: 3.582

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9.  A nonapoptotic cell death process, entosis, that occurs by cell-in-cell invasion.

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10.  Localized zones of Rho and Rac activities drive initiation and expansion of epithelial cell-cell adhesion.

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  84 in total

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3.  Induction of entosis by epithelial cadherin expression.

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4.  Kinetic Monte Carlo simulations of the assembly of filamentous biomacromolecules by dimer addition mechanism.

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Review 5.  Cancer cell metabolism: the essential role of the nonessential amino acid, glutamine.

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7.  Entosis, a key player in cancer cell competition.

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Review 8.  Population Dynamics in Cell Death: Mechanisms of Propagation.

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Review 9.  How the mechanobiome drives cell behavior, viewed through the lens of control theory.

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10.  Cancer cells enter dormancy after cannibalizing mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs).

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