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Defective gap junctional intercellular communication in the carcinogenic process

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-BIOMEMBRANES
Volume 1719, Issue 1-2, Pages 125-145

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamem.2005.11.004

Keywords

cancer; carcinogenesis; connexin; gap junction; gap-junctional intercellular communication

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Gap junctions are membrane structures made of intercellular channels which permit the diffusion from cytoplasm to cytoplasm of small hydrophilic molecules. Nearly 40 years ago, the loss of functional gap junctions has been described in cancer cells and led to the hypothesis that such type of intercellular communication is involved in the carcinogenesis process. From this time, a lot of data has been accumulated confirming that gap junctions are frequently decreased or absent in cancer cells whatever their tissue and species origins. Here, we review such data by insisting on the possible links existing between altered gap junctional intercellular communication capacity (or the altered expression of their constitutive proteins, the connexins) and the stages of cancer progression in various cancer models. Then, we analyse particular aspects of the disturbance of connexin-mediated communication in cancer such as the cytoplasmic localization of connexins, the lack of heterologous communication between cancer cells and normal cells, the role of connexin gene mutations in cancer. In a separate part of the review, we also analyse the disturbance of gap junctional intercellular communication during the late stages of cancer (invasion and metastasis processes). (C) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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