E-cadherin: context-dependent functions of a quintessential epithelial marker in metastasis

C Fang, Y Kang - Cancer Research, 2021 - AACR
Cancer Research, 2021AACR
Loss of E-cadherin expression has been well known as a hallmark of epithelial–
mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is linked to increased risk of cancer metastasis.
However, it was less clear whether E-cadherin and its downstream signaling pathways are
functionally involved in driving EMT and the prometastatic phenotype. A study by Onder and
colleagues in 2008 discovered that E-cadherin loss not only helps tumor cells detach from
each other by breaking down cell–cell junctions but also elicits intracellular signaling events …
Abstract
Loss of E-cadherin expression has been well known as a hallmark of epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is linked to increased risk of cancer metastasis. However, it was less clear whether E-cadherin and its downstream signaling pathways are functionally involved in driving EMT and the prometastatic phenotype. A study by Onder and colleagues in 2008 discovered that E-cadherin loss not only helps tumor cells detach from each other by breaking down cell–cell junctions but also elicits intracellular signaling events to confer a mesenchymal cell state and metastatic phenotype. This study established E-cadherin as an important global regulator, rather than just a marker, of EMT. The discovery inspired further investigation in the following decade that significantly deepened our understanding of E-cadherin and its diverse functions and more broadly of cellular plasticity in different stages and contexts of cancer metastasis.
See related article by Onder and colleagues, Cancer Res 2008;68:3645–3654.
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