| Literature DB >> 26901232 |
Yang Yu1, Randolph C Elble2,3.
Abstract
The transition of sessile epithelial cells to a migratory, mesenchymal phenotype is essential for metazoan development and tissue repair, but this program is exploited by tumor cells in order to escape the confines of the primary organ site, evade immunosurveillance, and resist chemo-radiation. In addition, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) confers stem-like properties that increase efficiency of colonization of distant organs. This review evaluates the role of cell-cell junctions in suppressing EMT and maintaining a quiescent epithelium. We discuss the conflicting data on junctional signaling in cancer and recent developments that resolve some of these conflicts. We focus on evidence from breast cancer, but include other organ sites where appropriate. Current and potential strategies for inhibition of EMT are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: E-cadherin; EMT; PLEKHA7; adherens junctions; breast cancer; cancer stem cells; claudins; dissemination; human mammary epithelial cells; miR30b; tight junctions
Year: 2016 PMID: 26901232 PMCID: PMC4773782 DOI: 10.3390/jcm5020026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Epithelial junctions. (A) Generalized schematic showing types of cell–cell and cell-matrix attachments of simple columnar epithelium. Except for gap junctions, each complex is linked both to cytoskeletal elements and to its own signaling apparatus. (B) Regulation of EMT–MET (epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition–mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition) by Adherens Junctions, adapted from Kourtidis et al. [65]. Canonically, E-cadherin sequesters β-catenin and downregulates Twist. More recently, E-cadherin was found to participate in two functionally distinct complexes, an apical one that opposes EMT and a basal one that promotes it. Apically, it interacts with PLEKHA7 and a microRNA processing complex that suppresses proliferation and mesenchymal functions. However, in basolateral locations it actually promotes those functions. This may explain the inconsistent patterns of E-cadherin expression across breast cancer subtypes and the observation that it sometimes seems to promote invasion/metastasis rather than suppress it. For simplicity, E-cadherin and cadherin-11 are shown as monomers and cytoskeletal interactions are omitted.
Figure 2Tight Junctions. (A) A simple representation of signaling events at Tight Junctions showing the factors discussed in this review. For simplicity, adhesion molecules are represented as monomers. All interact independently with ZO-1, which sequesters proliferative transcription factor ZONAB. ZO-2 independently inhibits activity of other transcription factors. ZO-1 also binds PLEKHA7 to TJ (tight junction). By analogy with its role at AJ (adherens junction), PLEKHA7 may recruit miR-processing factors to TJ. (B) Establishment of apical-basal polarity by multiprotein complexes that specify apical and basal domains.
Putative roles of claudins in various cancers.
| Type of Claudin | Tumor Suppressor | Oncogene |
|---|---|---|
| Claudin-1 | Lung cancer [ | Colon cancer [ |
| - | Melanoma [ | |
| Breast cancer [ | Breast cancer [ | |
| Claudin-2 | - | Breast cancer [ |
| Claudin-3 | - | Breast cancer [ |
| Claudin-4 | - | Breast cancer [ |
| Claudin-5 | - | Breast cancer [ |
| Claudin-6 | Breast cancer [ | - |
| Claudin-7 | Breast cancer [ | Colorectal cancer [ |
| Claudin-16 | Breast cancer [ | - |