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Active contractility at E-cadherin junctions and its implications for cell extrusion in cancer

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Version 5 2015-10-09, 21:25
Version 4 2015-10-09, 21:25
Version 3 2015-03-09, 21:42
Version 2 2015-02-23, 18:46
Version 1 2015-02-01, 00:00
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posted on 2015-10-09, 21:25 authored by Selwin K Wu, Anne K Lagendijk, Benjamin M Hogan, Guillermo A Gomez, Alpha S Yap

Cellular contractility regulates tissue cohesion and morphogenesis. In epithelia, E-cadherin adhesion couples the contractile cortices of neighboring cells together to produce tension at junctions that can be transmitted across the epithelium in a planar fashion. We have recently demonstrated that contractility is also patterned in the apical-lateral axis within epithelial junctions. Our findings highlight the role that cytoskeletal regulation plays in controlling the levels of intra-junctional tension. Of note, dysregulation of this apicolateral pattern of tension can drive oncogenic cell extrusion. In this article, we provide a detailed description of the actomyosin cytoskeleton organization during oncogenic extrusion and discuss the implications of cell extrusion in cancer.

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