Tumor invasion as dysregulated cell motility

J Kassis, DA Lauffenburger, T Turner, A Wells - Seminars in cancer biology, 2001 - Elsevier
Seminars in cancer biology, 2001Elsevier
Investigations across a range of disciplines over the past decade have brought the study of
cell motility and its role in invasion to an exciting threshold. The biophysical forces
proximally involved in generating cell locomotion, as well as the underlying signaling and
genomic regulatory pro-cesses, are gradually becoming elucidated. We now appreciate the
intricacies of the many cellular and extracellu-lar events that modulate cell migration. This
has enabled the demonstration of a causal role of cell motility in tumor progression, with …
Investigations across a range of disciplines over the past decade have brought the study of cell motility and its role in invasion to an exciting threshold. The biophysical forces proximally involved in generating cell locomotion, as well as the underlying signaling and genomic regulatory pro- cesses, are gradually becoming elucidated. We now appreciate the intricacies of the many cellular and extracellu- lar events that modulate cell migration. This has enabled the demonstration of a causal role of cell motility in tumor progression, with various points of ‘dysregulation’ of motility being responsible for promoting invasion. In this paper, we describe key fundamental principles governing cell motility and branch out to describe the essence of the data that describe these principles. It has become evident that many proposed models may indeed be converging into a tightly-woven tapestry of coordinated events which employ various growth factors and their receptors, adhesion receptors (integrins), downstream molecules, cytoskeletal components, and altered genomic regulation to accomplish cell motility. Tumor invasion occurs in response to dysregulation of many of these modulatory points; specific examples include increased signaling from the EGF receptor and through PLC γ, altered localization and expression of integrins, changes in actin modifying proteins and increased transcription from specific promoter sites. This diversity of alterations all leading to tumor invasion point to the difficulty of correcting causal events leading to tumor invasion and rather suggest that the underlying common processes required for motility be targeted for therapeutic intervention.
Elsevier