4.3 Article

E-cadherin as an indicator of mesenchymal to epithelial reverting transitions during the metastatic seeding of disseminated carcinomas

Journal

CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 621-628

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10585-008-9167-1

Keywords

cancer dissemination; differentiation; growth factor receptors; tumor dormancy

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM063569, R01 GM063569-03, R01 GM063569-04] Funding Source: Medline

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Cancer metastasis follows a sequential series of events, and many of the critical steps are distinctly similar to EMT-like transformations that occur during normal embryonic development. A current area of focus is the similarities between how cancer cells interact with the ectopic parenchyma after metastatic spread, and secondary developmental MET events that occur in epithelial tissues that have re-assembled within the embryo from mesenchymal cells. Accumulating evidence suggests a critical role for these secondary events, termed mesenchymal-epithelial transitions (MET) in development and mesenchymal-epithelial reverting transitions (MErT) in cancer. In this situation, metastatic seed cancer cells may inertly become part of the ectopic tissue and therefore surmount the metastatic inefficiencies to which most disseminated cancer cells succumb. Just as a critical EMT event is the downregulation or silencing of E-cadherin, we discuss the role of E-cadherin in cancer-associated MErT at distant metastatic sites and speculate on the implications for the fate of micrometastases that undergo a transition to being E-cadherin positive.

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