Apicobasal polarity and Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK signalling in cancer

Many glandular epithelia such as the GI tract are composed of a sheet of cells polarised along their apicobasal axes with the apical membrane facing the lumen of the tube and the basolateral membrane binding to neighbouring cells and the basal extracellular matrix (ECM). Generation of these two membrane domains with distinct cellular macromolecular contents (including proteins and lipids) provides the basic building blocks that support tissue architecture and their various functions.1 The apicobasal polarisation of epithelial cells is a complex and multistage programme controlled by a network of proteins and lipids. It is initiated by cues from the ECM and cell–cell contacts that trigger changes to the cytoskeleton and hence the polarised organisation of endosomal trafficking that sort and deliver proteins and lipids to the apical and basolateral membrane domains. These events lead to the establishment of cell–cell junctional complexes comprising tight and adherens junctions
Source: Gut - Category: Gastroenterology Authors: Tags: Commentary Source Type: research