학술논문

Loss of polarity alters proliferation and differentiation in low-grade endometrial cancers by disrupting Notch signaling.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS ONE. 12/05/2017, Vol. 12 Issue 12, p1-20. 20p.
Subject
*CELL adhesion
*EPITHELIUM
*HOMEOSTASIS
*ENDOMETRIAL cancer
*NOTCH signaling pathway
*ANATOMY
Language
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Cell adhesion and apicobasal polarity together maintain epithelial tissue organization and homeostasis. Loss of adhesion has been described as a prerequisite for the epithelial to mesenchymal transition. However, what role misregulation of apicobasal polarity promotes tumor initiation and/or early progression remains unclear. We find that human low-grade endometrial cancers are associated with disrupted localization of the apical polarity protein Par3 and Ezrin while, the adhesion molecule E-cadherin remains unchanged, accompanied by decreased Notch signaling, and altered Notch receptor localization. Depletion of Par3 or Ezrin, in a cell-based model, results in loss of epithelial architecture, differentiation, increased proliferation, migration and decreased Notch signaling. Re-expression of Par3 in endometrial cancer cell lines with disrupted Par3 protein levels blocks proliferation and reduces migration in a Notch dependent manner. These data uncover a function for apicobasal polarity independent of cell adhesion in regulating Notch-mediated differentiation signals in endometrial epithelial cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]