4.3 Review

Cell polarity signaling in the plasticity of cancer cell invasiveness

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 7, Issue 18, Pages 25022-25049

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.7214

Keywords

polarity; invasion; plasticity; EMT; AMT

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [15-17419S, 15-07321S, 13-06405S]
  2. project BIOCEV from the European Regional Development Fund [CZ.1.05/1.1.00/02.0109]

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Apico-basal polarity is typical of cells present in differentiated epithelium while front-rear polarity develops in motile cells. In cancer development, the transition from epithelial to migratory polarity may be seen as the hallmark of cancer progression to an invasive and metastatic disease. Despite the morphological and functional dissimilarity, both epithelial and migratory polarity are controlled by a common set of polarity complexes Par, Scribble and Crumbs, phosphoinositides, and small Rho GTPases Rac, Rho and Cdc42. In epithelial tissues, their mutual interplay ensures apico-basal and planar cell polarity. Accordingly, altered functions of these polarity determinants lead to disrupted cell-cell adhesions, cytoskeleton rearrangements and overall loss of epithelial homeostasis. Polarity proteins are further engaged in diverse interactions that promote the establishment of front-rear polarity, and they help cancer cells to adopt different invasion modes. Invading cancer cells can employ either the collective, mesenchymal or amoeboid invasion modes or actively switch between them and gain intermediate phenotypes. Elucidation of the role of polarity proteins during these invasion modes and the associated transitions is a necessary step towards understanding the complex problem of metastasis. In this review we summarize the current knowledge of the role of cell polarity signaling in the plasticity of cancer cell invasiveness.

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