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Publication : Tensional homeostasis and the malignant phenotype.

First Author  Paszek MJ Year  2005
Journal  Cancer Cell Volume  8
Issue  3 Pages  241-54
PubMed ID  16169468 Mgi Jnum  J:102237
Mgi Id  MGI:3607102 Doi  10.1016/j.ccr.2005.08.010
Citation  Paszek MJ, et al. (2005) Tensional homeostasis and the malignant phenotype. Cancer Cell 8(3):241-54
abstractText  Tumors are stiffer than normal tissue, and tumors have altered integrins. Because integrins are mechanotransducers that regulate cell fate, we asked whether tissue stiffness could promote malignant behavior by modulating integrins. We found that tumors are rigid because they have a stiff stroma and elevated Rho-dependent cytoskeletal tension that drives focal adhesions, disrupts adherens junctions, perturbs tissue polarity, enhances growth, and hinders lumen formation. Matrix stiffness perturbs epithelial morphogenesis by clustering integrins to enhance ERK activation and increase ROCK-generated contractility and focal adhesions. Contractile, EGF-transformed epithelia with elevated ERK and Rho activity could be phenotypically reverted to tissues lacking focal adhesions if Rho-generated contractility or ERK activity was decreased. Thus, ERK and Rho constitute part of an integrated mechanoregulatory circuit linking matrix stiffness to cytoskeletal tension through integrins to regulate tissue phenotype.
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