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1.
Recent studies have emphasized the importance of cellular microenvironment in modulating cell growth and signaling. In vitro, collagen matrices, Matrigel, and other synthetic support systems have been used to simulate in vivo microenvironments, and epithelial cells grown in these matrices manifest significant differences in proliferation, differentiation, response to drugs, and other parameters. However, these substrates do not closely resemble the mesenchymal microenvironment that is typically associated with advanced carcinomas in vivo, which is produced to a large extent by fibroblasts. In this study, we have evaluated the ability of a fibroblast-derived three-dimensional matrix to regulate the growth of a panel of 11 human tumor epithelial cell lines. Although proliferative and morphological responses to three-dimensional cues segregated independently, general responsiveness to the matrix correlated with the ability of matrix to influence drug responses. Fibroblast-derived three-dimensional matrix increased beta1-integrin-dependent survival of a subset of human cancer cell lines during taxol treatment, while it sensitized or minimally influenced survival of other cells. beta1-integrin-dependent changes in cell resistance to taxol did not correlate with the degree of modulation of FAK and Akt, implying that additional signaling factors are involved. Based on these results, we propose that these matrices potentially have value as in vitro drug screening platforms.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of stromal cells, including fibroblasts on mammary tumor progression has been well documented through the use of mouse models, in particular through transplantation of stromal cells and epithelial cells in the mammary gland of mice. Current transplantation models often involve the use of immunocompromised mice due to the different genetic backgrounds of stromal cells and epithelial cells. Extracellular matrices are often used to embed the two different cell types for consistent cell-cell interactions, but involve the use of Matrigel or rat tail collagen, which are immunogenic substrates. The lack of functional T cells from immunocompromised mice prevents accurate assessment of stromal cells on mammary tumor progression in vivo, with important implications on drug development and efficacy. Moreover, immunocompromised mice are costly, hard to breed and require special care conditions. To overcome these obstacles, we have developed an approach to orthotopically transplant stromal cell and epithelial cells into mice from the same genetic background to induce consistent tumor formation. This system involves harvesting normal, carcinoma associated fibroblasts, PyVmT mammary carcinoma cells and collagen from donor C57BL/6J mice. The cells are then embedded in collagen and transplanted in the inguinal mammary glands of female C57BL/6J mice. Transplantation of PyVmT cells alone form palpable tumors 30-40 days post transplantation. Endpoint analysis at 60 days indicates that co-transplantation with fibroblasts enhances mammary tumor growth compared to PyVmT cells transplanted alone. While cells and matrix from C57BL/6J mice were used in these studies, the isolation of cells and matrix and transplantation approach may be applied towards mice from different genetic backgrounds demonstrating versatility. In summary, this system may be used to investigate molecular interactions between stromal cells and epithelial cells, and overcomes critical limitations in immunocompromised mouse models. Download video file.(81M, mov)  相似文献   

3.
Integrin alpha3beta1 engagement disrupts intercellular adhesion   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
During tissue morphogenesis and tumor invasion, epithelial cells must undergo intercellular rearrangement in which cells are repositioned with respect to one another and the surrounding mesenchymal extracellular matrix. Using three-dimensional aggregates of squamous epithelial cells, we show that such intercellular rearrangements can be triggered by activation of beta1 integrins after their ligation with extracellular matrices. On nonadherent substrates, multicellular aggregates (MCAs) formed rapidly via E-cadherin junctional complexes and over time became compacted spheroids exhibiting a more epithelial phenotype. After MCAs were replated on culture substrates, the spheroids collapsed to yield tightly arranged cell monolayers. Cell-cell contact induced rapid elevation in E-cadherin levels, which was due to an increase in the metabolic stability of junctional receptors. During MCA remodeling of cell-cell adhesions, and monolayer formation, their E-cadherin levels fell rapidly. Similar behavior was obtained regardless of which ECM ligand-collagen type I, fibronectin, or laminin 1-MCAs were seeded on. In contrast, when seeded onto a matrix elaborated by squamous epithelial cells, cells in the MCA attached, spread, lost cell-cell junctions, and dispersed. Analysis identified laminin 5 as the active ECM ligand in this matrix, and MCA dispersion required functional beta1 integrin and specifically alpha3beta1. Furthermore, substrate-immobilized anti-integrin antibody effectively reproduced the epithelial-mesenchymal-like transition induced by the laminin 5 matrix. During the early stages of aggregate rearrangement and collapse, cells on laminin 5 substrates, but not those on collagen I substrates, exhibited intense cortical arrays of F-actin, microspikes, and fascin accumulation at their peripheral surfaces. These results suggest that engagement of specific integrin-ligand pairs regulates cadherin junctional adhesions during events common to epithelial morphogenesis and tumor invasion.  相似文献   

4.
Along with degradation of type IV collagen in basement membrane, destruction of the stromal collagens, types I and III, is an essential step in the invasive/metastatic behavior of tumor cells, and it is mediated, at least in part, by interstitial collagenase 1 (matrix metalloproteinase 1 (MMP-1)). Because A2058 melanoma cells produce substantial quantities of MMP-1, we used these cells as models for studying invasion of type I collagen. With a sensitive and quantitative in vitro invasion assay, we monitored the ability of these cells to invade a matrix of type I collagen and the ability of a serine proteinase inhibitor and all-trans-retinoic acid to block invasion. Although these cells produce copious amounts of MMP-1, they do not invade collagen unless they are co-cultured with fibroblasts or with conditioned medium derived from fibroblasts. Our studies indicate that a proteolytic cascade that depends on stromal/tumor cell interactions facilitates the ability of A2058 melanoma cells to invade a matrix of type I collagen. This cascade activates latent MMP-1 and involves both serine proteinases and MMPs, particularly stromelysin 1 (MMP-3). All-trans-retinoic acid (10(-6) M) suppresses the invasion of tumor cells by several mechanisms that include suppression of MMP synthesis and an increase in levels of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 1 and 2. We conclude that invasion of stromal collagen by A2058 melanoma cells is mediated by a novel host/tumor cell interaction in which a proteolytic cascade culminates in the activation of pro-MMP-1 and tumor cell invasion.  相似文献   

5.
During tissue morphogenesis and tumor invasion, epithelial cells must undergo intercellular rearrangement in which cells are repositioned with respect to one another and the surrounding mesenchymal extracellular matrix. Using three-dimensional aggregates of squamous epithelial cells, we show that such intercellular rearrangements can be triggered by activation of β1 integrins after their ligation with extracellular matrices. On nonadherent substrates, multicellular aggregates (MCAs) formed rapidly via E-cadherin junctional complexes and over time became compacted spheroids exhibiting a more epithelial phenotype. After MCAs were replated on culture substrates, the spheroids collapsed to yield tightly arranged cell monolayers. Cell–cell contact induced rapid elevation in E-cadherin levels, which was due to an increase in the metabolic stability of junctional receptors. During MCA remodeling of cell–cell adhesions, and monolayer formation, their E-cadherin levels fell rapidly. Similar behavior was obtained regardless of which ECM ligand—collagen type I, fibronectin, or laminin 1—MCAs were seeded on. In contrast, when seeded onto a matrix elaborated by squamous epithelial cells, cells in the MCA attached, spread, lost cell–cell junctions, and dispersed. Analysis identified laminin 5 as the active ECM ligand in this matrix, and MCA dispersion required functional β1 integrin and specifically α3β1. Furthermore, substrate-immobilized anti-integrin antibody effectively reproduced the epithelial–mesenchymal-like transition induced by the laminin 5 matrix. During the early stages of aggregate rearrangement and collapse, cells on laminin 5 substrates, but not those on collagen I substrates, exhibited intense cortical arrays of F-actin, microspikes, and fascin accumulation at their peripheral surfaces. These results suggest that engagement of specific integrin–ligand pairs regulates cadherin junctional adhesions during events common to epithelial morphogenesis and tumor invasion.  相似文献   

6.
Adult human bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) containing or consisting of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are an important source in tissue homeostasis and repair. Although many processes involved in their differentiation into diverse lineages have been deciphered, substantial inroads remain to be gained to synthesize a complete regulatory picture. The present study suggests that structural conformation of extracellular collagen I, the major organic matrix component in musculoskeletal tissues, plays, along with differentiation stimuli, a decisive role in the selection of differentiation lineage. It introduces a novel concept which proposes that structural transition of collagen I matrix regulates cell differentiation through distinct signaling pathways specific for the structural state of the matrix. Thus, on native collagen I matrix inefficient adipogenesis is p38-independent, whereas on its denatured counterpart, an efficient adipogenesis is primarily regulated by p38 kinase. Inversely, osteogenic differentiation occurs efficiently on native, but not on denatured collagen I matrix, with a low commencement threshold on the former and a substantially higher one on the latter. Osteogenesis on collagen I matrices in both structural conformations is fully dependent on ERK. However, whereas on native collagen I matrix osteogenic differentiation is Hsp90-dependent, on denatured collagen I matrix it is Hsp90-independent. The matrix conformation-mediated regulation appears to be one of the mechanisms determining differentiation lineage of BMSCs. It allows a novel interpretation of the bone remodeling cycle, explains the marked physiological aging-related adipogenic shift in musculoskeletal tissues, and can be a principal contributor to adipogenic shift seen in a number of clinical disorders.  相似文献   

7.

Background

Cancer invasion is a multi-step process which coordinates interactions between tumor cells with mechanotransduction towards the surrounding matrix, resulting in distinct cancer invasion strategies. Defined by context, mesenchymal tumors, including melanoma and fibrosarcoma, develop either single-cell or collective invasion modes, however, the mechanical and molecular programs underlying such plasticity of mesenchymal invasion programs remain unclear.

Methods

To test how tissue anatomy determines invasion mode, spheroids of MV3 melanoma and HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells were embedded into 3D collagen matrices of varying density and stiffness and analyzed for migration type and efficacy with matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-dependent collagen degradation enabled or pharmacologically inhibited.

Results

With increasing collagen density and dependent on proteolytic collagen breakdown and track clearance, but independent of matrix stiffness, cells switched from single-cell to collective invasion modes. Conversion to collective invasion included gain of cell-to-cell junctions, supracellular polarization and joint guidance along migration tracks.

Conclusions

The density of the extracellulair matrix (ECM) determines the invasion mode of mesenchymal tumor cells. Whereas fibrillar, high porosity ECM enables single-cell dissemination, dense matrix induces cell–cell interaction, leader–follower cell behavior and collective migration as an obligate protease-dependent process.

General significance

These findings establish plasticity of cancer invasion programs in response to ECM porosity and confinement, thereby recapitulating invasion patterns of mesenchymal tumors in vivo. The conversion to collective invasion with increasing ECM confinement supports the concept of cell jamming as a guiding principle for melanoma and fibrosarcoma cells into dense tissue.This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Matrix-mediated cell behaviour and properties.  相似文献   

8.
Previously, we described a profound impact of structural conformation of collagen matrix on osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation of bone marrow stromal cells. Thus, a marginal p38-independent adipogenesis on native collagen I matrix contrasts with an efficient p38-dependent differentiation on denatured collagen I. An efficient Hsp90-dependent osteogenesis occurs on native collagen I matrix but not on its denatured counterpart where it is insignificant and proceeds in an Hsp90-independent manner. Whereas only marginal osteogenesis and no detectable adipogenesis of bone marrow stromal cells occur on native collagen IV, the same matrix supports a highly efficient adipogenesis in denatured structural state. The present study addresses the opposite direction in the flow of cell–matrix interaction, namely the cells' influence on structural state of collagen matrix, and tests the possibility that differentiating bone marrow stromal cells may adjust the expression phenotype of MMP and TIMP in such a way that, if translated into matrix modification, would facilitate the maintenance of collagen matrix in or its modification into structural state optimal for the ongoing differentiation process. The results obtained indicate that this is indeed the case. In bone marrow stromal cells stimulated to undergo adipogenesis the expression of MMP increases and that of TIMP decreases. In cells induced to undergo osteogenesis the opposite is true: MMP/TIMP expression is adjusted in a manner that, if translated into matrix modification, could promote the native structural conformation optimal for this type of differentiation. The results obtained also indicate that the observed adjustment in MMP/TIMP expression phenotype might be an early differentiation event and that differentiation stimulation alone might be sufficient to trigger it even on matrices not favorable to a given type of differentiation. The findings of the present study raise significant questions and indicate directions for further experimentation.  相似文献   

9.
Cancer progression (initiation, growth, invasion and metastasis) occurs through interactions between malignant cells and the surrounding tumor stromal cells. The tumor microenvironment is comprised of a variety of cell types, such as fibroblasts, immune cells, vascular endothelial cells, pericytes and bone-marrow-derived cells, embedded in the extracellular matrix (ECM). Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) have a pro-tumorigenic role through the secretion of soluble factors, angiogenesis and ECM remodeling. The experimental models for cancer cell survival, proliferation, migration, and invasion have mostly relied on two-dimensional monocellular and monolayer tissue cultures or Boyden chamber assays. However, these experiments do not precisely reflect the physiological or pathological conditions in a diseased organ. To gain a better understanding of tumor stromal or tumor matrix interactions, multicellular and three-dimensional cultures provide more powerful tools for investigating intercellular communication and ECM-dependent modulation of cancer cell behavior. As a platform for this type of study, we present an experimental model in which cancer cells are cultured on collagen gels embedded with primary cultures of CAFs.  相似文献   

10.
Interaction between tumor cells and stromal fibroblasts plays essential roles in tumor progression. However, its detailed molecular mechanism remains unclear. To understand the mechanism, we investigated molecules mediating this interaction using the three-dimensional (3D) co-culture system of Panc-1 pancreatic carcinoma cells with normal fibroblasts. When the two kinds of cells were placed on the top of collagen gel, the tumor cells scattered into the fibroblast layer, apparently undergoing epithelial‐mesenchymal transition. When fibroblasts were placed within collagen gel, Panc-1 cells actively invaded into the collagen gel, extending a microtubule-based long protrusion. Although transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) individually stimulated the tumor cell invasion into collagen gel without fibroblasts, TGF-β signaling inhibitors (SB431542 and LY2157299) significantly enhanced the Panc-1 cell invasion in the 3D co-culture with fibroblasts. Experiments with HGF/Met signaling inhibitors or with the fibroblast conditioned medium revealed that HGF was a major invasion-promoting factor secreted from fibroblasts and SB431542 increased the HGF secretion by blocking the HGF-suppressing activity of cancer cell-derived TGF-β. These results indicate that HGF and TGF-β are critical regulators for both tumor–stroma interaction and tumor invasion. The results also suggest that TGF-β signaling inhibitors may promote tumor progression under some pathological conditions.  相似文献   

11.
Strategies are needed to improve repopulation of decellularized lung scaffolds with stromal and functional epithelial cells. We demonstrate that decellularized mouse lungs recellularized in a dynamic low fluid shear suspension bioreactor, termed the rotating wall vessel (RWV), contained more cells with decreased apoptosis, increased proliferation and enhanced levels of total RNA compared to static recellularization conditions. These results were observed with two relevant mouse cell types: bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal (stem) cells (MSCs) and alveolar type II cells (C10). In addition, MSCs cultured in decellularized lungs under static but not bioreactor conditions formed multilayered aggregates. Gene expression and immunohistochemical analyses suggested differentiation of MSCs into collagen I-producing fibroblast-like cells in the bioreactor, indicating enhanced potential for remodeling of the decellularized scaffold matrix. In conclusion, dynamic suspension culture is promising for enhancing repopulation of decellularized lungs, and could contribute to remodeling the extracellular matrix of the scaffolds with subsequent effects on differentiation and functionality of inoculated cells.  相似文献   

12.
Breast epithelial cells develop into polarized and highly organized acinar and ductal structures in response to stromal cues, including extracellular matrix composition and density, which can in part be reproduced in 3D culture conditions. Here, we present the effects of various 3D in vitro stroma compositions (termed “matrices” or “substrates”) on the ability of heterotypic cultures of epithelial and mesenchymal stem cells to organize into acinar and tubular structures. Normal murine mammary gland (NMuMG) cells were cultured, either alone or in combination (30:70) with mouse mesenchymal stem cells (D1), in 3D matrices generated by agarose, collagen, and Matrigel® alone or by a combination thereof. After 3–5 d in culture, cell distribution, organization, and the presence of acinus-like and tubule-like structures were determined. The number of acinar structures was significantly higher in cultures grown in combination matrices of agarose with Matrigel® or collagen I when compared with cultures grown in Matrigel® or collagen I alone (p?p?相似文献   

13.
Matrix-cytoskeletal interactions in the developing eye   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The embryonic avian corneal epithelium in vitro responds to extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules in either soluble or polymerized form by flattening its basal surface, organizing the basal cortical actin cytoskeleton, and stepping up its production of corneal stroma twofold. Embryonic corneal epithelia, like hepatocytes and mammary gland cells, seem to contain heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) in their plasmalemma, which may interact with actin on the one hand or underlying collagen on the other. Work on the corneal epithelium suggests that, in addition to HSPG, specific glycoprotein receptors for laminin and collagen exist in the basal plasmalemma and play the critical role in actually organizing the basal epithelial cytoskeleton. As yet, uncharacterized proteins may link such receptors to actin. We suggest that ECM-dependent organization of the cytoskeleton is responsible for ECM enhancement of corneal epithelial differentiation. Cell shape and exogenous ECM also affect mesenchymal cell differentiation. In the case of the corneal fibroblast migrating in collagen gels, an actin cortex present around the elongate cell seems to interact with myosin in the cytosol to bring about pseudopodial extension. Both microtubules and actin microfilaments are involved in fibroblast elongation in collagen gels. It follows from the rules presented in this review that the mesenchymal cell surface is quite different from the epithelial cell surface in its organization. Nevertheless, epithelial cell surface-ECM interaction can be modified in the embryo at particular times to permit predesignated epithelial-mesenchymal transformations, as for example at the primitive streak. Though basal surfaces of definitive, nonmalignant epithelia adhere rather strictly to the rules of epithelium-ECM interaction and do not invade underlying ECM, the environment can be manipulated in vitro to cause these epithelia to send out pseudopodia and give rise aberrantly to mesenchymal cells in collagen gels. Further study of this phenomenon should cast light on the manner in which epithelial and mesenchymal cells organize receptors for matrix molecules on their cell surfaces and develop appropriate cytoskeletal responses to the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Interactions between epithelial cells and their environment are critical for normal function. Mammary epithelial cells require hormonal and extracellular matrix (ECM) signalling for the expression of tissue specific characteristics. With regard to ECM, cultured mammary epithelial cells synthesize and secrete milk proteins on stromal collagen I matrices. The onset of function coincides both with morphogenesis of a polarized epithelium and with deposition of basement membrane ECM basal to the cell layer. Mammary specific morphogenesis and biochemical differentiation is induced if mammary cells are cultured directly on exogenous basement membrane (EHS). Thus ECM may effect function by the concerted effect of permissivity for cell shape changes and the direct biochemical signalling of basement membrane molecules.A model is discussed where initial ECM control of mammary epithelial cell function originates in the interstitial matrix of stroma and subsequently transfers to the basement membrane when the epithelial cells have accumulated and deposited an organized basement membrane matrix.Dedicated to Professor Stuart Patton on the occasion of his 70th birthday.  相似文献   

15.
Analysis of the responsiveness of isolated adult urothelium to a series of different stromal cell-extracellular matrix combinations demonstrated the capacity of stromal cells to induce and maintain normal patterns of urothelial growth, differentiation, and maturation in vitro. By incorporating embryonic mesenchymal derived (Swiss 3T3) cells into type I collagen matrices, simplified three-dimensional tissue-like facsimiles of bladder stroma were derived. When recombined with sheets of isolated urothelium these facsimiles could approximately reproduce the capacity of natural stromal tissue to support the expression of normal urothelial tissue specific characteristics. In contrast cocultures between urothelia and monolayers of 3T3 cells, applied to the surface of planar collagen substrata could only permit urothelial cell attachment but not growth or differentiation whereas lethally irradiated 3T3 (feeder) cells, under similar experimental conditions, could support the maintenance of an immature or incompletely differentiated urothelium. Conditioned medium elaborated by cultured 3T3 cells could not stimulate further differentiation in urothelia cultured alone on planar collagen substrata. These studies indicate that a significant portion of the regulatory capacity of the stroma in stromal-urothelial interactions can be accounted for by the activities of a closely applied population of stromal cells, provided the cells are viable and presented to the urothelium in a three-dimensional context in combination with collagen. The capacity of embryonic mesenchymal cells to express properties appropriate to the development of a multilayered terminally differentiated urothelium suggests that normal interactions between adult urothelium and stroma are of limited specificity with the urothelium requiring an essential input of permissive signals only.  相似文献   

16.
The basis for specific changes in differentiation that accompany ras-oncogene-mediated transformation are not understood. When short-term cultures of fibroblast-like cells from adult rat adrenal glands were transformed with Kirsten murine sarcoma virus (KiMSV), the original stromal characteristics of the target cells (metachromatic extracellular matrix, high collagen production, collagen incorporation into pericellular matrix and a fibroblastic morphology and growth pattern) diminished. In contrast, parenchymal differentiation markers (neutral lipid, delta 5, 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, 21-hydroxylase and epithelial morphology) were enhanced. These changes in differentiation were initiated concurrently with the over-expression of the transforming protein v-p21, but were unrelated to the levels of v-p21 expression. They were independent of the immortalizing component of transformation mediated by v-K-ras, because they did not take place in spontaneously immortalized lines derived from the same target cells, unless the lines were also transformed with KiMSV. In normal embryonic development, stromal and parenchymal adrenocortical cells arise by divergent differentiation pathways from a common, multipotential mesenchymal precursor. The transformation-induced modulation from a predominantly stromal to a more-parenchymal phenotype is thus reminiscent of reversion to a more primitive, bipotential developmental stage.  相似文献   

17.
In localized tumors, basement membrane (BM) prevents invasive outgrowth of tumor cells into surrounding tissues. When carcinomas become invasive, cancer cells either degrade BM or reprogram stromal fibroblasts to breach BM barrier and lead invasion of cancer cells into surrounding tissues in a process called fibroblast‐led invasion. However, tumor‐derived factors orchestrating fibroblast‐led invasion remain poorly understood. Here it is shown that although early‐stage primary colorectal adenocarcinoma (SW480) cells are themselves unable to invade Matrigel matrix, they secrete exosomes that reprogram normal fibroblasts to acquire de novo capacity to invade matrix and lead invasion of SW480 cells. Strikingly, cancer cells follow leading fibroblasts as collective epithelial‐clusters, thereby circumventing need for epithelial to mesenchymal transition, a key event associated with invasion. Moreover, acquisition of pro‐invasive phenotype by fibroblasts treated with SW480‐derived exosomes relied on exosome‐mediated MAPK pathway activation. Mass spectrometry‐based protein profiling reveals that cancer exosomes upregulate fibroblasts proteins implicated in focal adhesion (ITGA2/A6/AV, ITGB1/B4/B5, EGFR, CRK), regulators of actin cytoskeleton (RAC1, ARF1, ARPC3, CYFIP1, NCKAP1, ICAM1, ERM complex), and signalling pathways (MAPK, Rap1, RAC1, Ras) important in pro‐invasive remodeling of extracellular matrix. Blocking tumor exosome‐mediated signaling to fibroblasts therefore represents an attractive therapeutic strategy in restraining tumors by perturbing stroma‐driven invasive outgrowth.  相似文献   

18.
A number of adult and embryonic epithelia, when suspended within native type I collagen gels, give rise to elongate bipolar cells that migrate freely within the three-dimensional matrix. The morphology of these newly formed mesenchyme-like cells is indistinguishable from "true" mesenchymal cells at the light and ultrastructural level. In this report, we extend previous observations on the transformation of embryonic avian lens epithelium to mesenchyme-like cells. Lens epithelia, dissected from 12-day chick embryos, were cultured either within a collagen matrix or on a two-dimensional surface. Cells derived from explants on the surface of type I collagen express the epithelial phenotype. The cells form new basal lamina, continue to express delta-crystallin protein and secrete both type IV collagen and laminin. In contrast, epithelia suspended within collagen gels lose epithelial morphology, phenotype, and cytodifferentiation. The newly formed mesenchyme-like cells lack the ability to synthesize lens-specific delta-crystallin protein, type IV collagen, and laminin. They do, however, express type I collagen de novo, a characteristic of mesenchymal cells. The changes in cytodifferentiation and tissue phenotype which occur during the transformation are stable under the conditions studied here. When mesenchyme-like cells are removed from the gel and replated onto two-dimensional surfaces, they remain bipolar, will invade collagen matrices, and are unable to synthesize delta-crystallin protein.  相似文献   

19.
Double immunofluorescence staining experiments designed to examine the synthesis and deposition of collagen types I and IV in cultured explants of embryonic mouse lung revealed the presence of connective tissue-like fibers that were immunoreactive with anti-type IV collagen antibodies. This observation is contrary to the widely accepted belief that type IV collagen is found only in sheet-like arrangements beneath epithelia or as a sheath-like layer enveloping bundles of nerve or muscle cells. The extracellular matrix produced by cells that migrate from embryonic mouse lung rudiments in vitro was examined by double indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. Affinity-purified monospecific polyclonal antibodies were used to examine cells after growth on glass or native collagen substrata. The data show that embryonic mesenchymal cells can produce organized fibers of type IV collagen that are not contained within a basement membrane, and that embryonic epithelial cells deposit fibers and strands of type IV collagen beneath their basal surface when grown on glass; however, when grown on a rat tail collagen substratum the epithelial cells produce a fine meshwork. To our knowledge this work represents the first report that type IV collagen can be organized by cells into a fibrous extracellular matrix that is not a basement membrane.  相似文献   

20.
The native extracellular matrix (ECM) and the cells that comprise human tissues are together engaged in a complex relationship; cells alter the composition and structure of the ECM to regulate the material and biologic properties of the surrounding environment while the composition and structure of the ECM modulates cellular processes that maintain healthy tissue and repair diseased tissue. This reciprocal relationship occurs via cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) such as integrins, selectins, cadherins and IgSF adhesion molecules. To study these cell-ECM interactions, researchers use two-dimensional substrates or three-dimensional matrices composed of native proteins or bioactive peptide sequences to study single cell function. While two-dimensional substrates provide valuable information about cell-ECM interactions, three-dimensional matrices more closely mimic the native ECM; cells cultured in three-dimensional matrices have demonstrated greater cell movement and increased integrin expression when compared to cells cultured on two-dimensional substrates. In this article we review a number of cellular processes (adhesion, motility, phagocytosis, differentiation and survival) and examine the cell adhesion molecules and ECM proteins (or bioactive peptide sequences) that mediate cell functionality.  相似文献   

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