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Publication : Divergent regulation of basement membrane trafficking by human macrophages and cancer cells.

First Author  Bahr JC Year  2022
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  13
Issue  1 Pages  6409
PubMed ID  36302921 Mgi Jnum  J:331561
Mgi Id  MGI:7379605 Doi  10.1038/s41467-022-34087-x
Citation  Bahr JC, et al. (2022) Divergent regulation of basement membrane trafficking by human macrophages and cancer cells. Nat Commun 13(1):6409
abstractText  Macrophages and cancer cells populations are posited to navigate basement membrane barriers by either mobilizing proteolytic enzymes or deploying mechanical forces. Nevertheless, the relative roles, or identity, of the proteinase -dependent or -independent mechanisms used by macrophages versus cancer cells to transmigrate basement membrane barriers harboring physiologically-relevant covalent crosslinks remains ill-defined. Herein, both macrophages and cancer cells are shown to mobilize membrane-anchored matrix metalloproteinases to proteolytically remodel native basement membranes isolated from murine tissues while infiltrating the underlying interstitial matrix ex vivo. In the absence of proteolytic activity, however, only macrophages deploy actomyosin-generated forces to transmigrate basement membrane pores, thereby providing the cells with proteinase-independent access to the interstitial matrix while simultaneously exerting global effects on the macrophage transcriptome. By contrast, cancer cell invasive activity is reliant on metalloproteinase activity and neither mechanical force nor changes in nuclear rigidity rescue basement membrane transmigration. These studies identify membrane-anchored matrix metalloproteinases as key proteolytic effectors of basement membrane remodeling by macrophages and cancer cells while also defining the divergent invasive strategies used by normal and neoplastic cells to traverse native tissue barriers.
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