Cancer 7: External factors controlling division and behaviour of normal and cancerous cells Flashcards

1
Q

Define cell behaviour

A

The way cells interact with their external environment and their reactions to this, particularly proliferative and motile responses of cells.

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2
Q

What external influences are detected by cells?

A

Chemical: hormones, growth factors, ion concs, ECM, molecules on other cells, nutrients and dissolved gas (O2/CO2) concs.

Physical: mechanical stresses, temperature, the topography or “layout” of the ECM and other cells

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3
Q

What is a lamellipod?

A

Cytoskeletal protein actin projection on the leading edge of the cell

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4
Q

What is the basic behaviour of cells in culture?

A

Cell spreading - energy requiring process required to modulate cell adhesion and the cytoskeleton during spreading

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5
Q

What is cell-ECM adhesion?

A

Cells need to be bound to the ECM to be fully competent for responding to soluble growth factors.

  • They need to be attached to ECM to begin protein synthesis and proliferation.
  • Attached to ECM for survival.

Anchorage dependence

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6
Q

What external factors can influence cell division?

A

Growth factors
Cell-cell adhesion
Cell-ECM adhesion

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7
Q

What can the cell phenotype be determined by?

A

The cell phenotype can be determined by the composition of the matrix.

Example: Cultured mammary epithelium

(A) in interstitial matrix (type 1 collagen), mammary epithelium does not differentiate to secretory cells;

(B) in basal lamina (basement membrane) matrix, mammary cells organise into “organoids” and produce milk proteins.

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8
Q

How do cells receive information about its surrounding from its adhesion to ECM?

A

Cells have receptors on their cell surface which bind specifically to ECM molecules. These molecules are often linked, at their cytoplasmic domains, to the cytoskeleton. This arrangement means that there is mechanical continuity between ECM and the cell interior

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9
Q

What are integrins?

A

These are heterodimer complexes of alpha and beta subunits that associate extracellularly by their “head” regions. Each of the “leg” regions spans the plasma membrane.

Ligand-binding occurs at the junction of the head regions

See slide for diagram

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10
Q

How many different combinations of alpha and beta subunits are there?

A

More than 20. They bind specifically to short peptide sequences on ECM proteins.

For example alpha5beta1 fibronectin receptor binds arg-gly-asp (RGD)

Peptide sequences such as RGD are found in more than one ECM molecule.

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11
Q

How do integrins link to the actin cytoskeleton?

A

Most integrins link to the actin cytoskeleton via actin-binding proteins.
Integrin complexes cluster to form focal adhesions (most) or hemidesmosomes.

These clusters are involved in signal transduction

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12
Q

How does signalling happen from the the ECM to the inside of the cell?

A

ECM receptors (e.g. integrins) can act to transduce signals

e. g. ECM binding to an integrin complex can stimulate the complex to produce a signal inside the cell,
i. e. “outside-in” integrin signalling

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13
Q

How do cell-ECM adhesion and signals be switched on and off?

A

Integrins complexes can adopt flexed and extended molecular confirmations.

Switching between these confirmations affects their ability to bind their ligands, and their signalling. In this way, cell-ECM adhesion, and signals, can be switched on and off.

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14
Q

How can the the ECM alter the phenotype of the cell?

A

The composition of the ECM will determine which integrin complexes bind and which signals it receives.

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15
Q

What do focal adhesions do?

A

They sense the mechanical properties of their surroundings - Cells can exert force on a environment causing it to stretch/deform.

The amount of force generated is dependent on the force generated by the cytoskeleton and the stiffness of the ECM

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16
Q

What do integrins recruit?

A

Cytoplasmic proteins which promote both signalling and actin assembly.

17
Q

What is inside-out integrin signalling?

A

A signal generated inside the cell (e.g. as the result of hormone binding to receptor) can act on an integrin complex to alter the affinity of an integrin (i.e. alter its affinity for its ECM binding)

(e.g. in inflammation or blood-clotting, switching on adhesion of circulating leukocytes)

18
Q

Summarise the conformation changes to the integrin complexes during activation and signalling

A

Low-affinity = bent confirmation, weak or no binding to ligand

High-affinity = extended confirmation, strong binding to ligand

Signal from inside the cell acts on the integrin complex to promote the switch to the extended high-affinity conformation: “inside-out” activation; switches adhesion on.

ECM ligand binds and causes the further opening of the legs. This exposes the binding sites for the recruitment of cytoplasmic signalling molecules:

19
Q

What is density-dependence of cell division

A

The higher the cell density the less cell proliferation - cells compete for growth factors

GF –> ERK MAP Kinase Cascade

20
Q

What signals control proliferation of tissue cells?

A
Growth factors (density dependence)
ECM (anchorage dependence)

Both signals needed for efficient stimulation of proliferation –> activate MAPK

21
Q

What are the different contact interactions between cells?

A

short-term: transient interactions between cells which do not form stable cell-cell junctions

long term: stable interactions resulting in formation of cell-cell junctions

22
Q

What happens when there is cell contact between non-epithelial cells?

A

When most non-epithelial cells “collide”, they do not form stable cell-cell contacts. They actually “repel” one another by paralysing motility at the contact site, promoting the formation of a motile front at another site on the cell, and moving off in the opposite direction.

This is contact inhibition of locomotion and is responsible for preventing multilayering of cells in culture and in vivo.

23
Q

Which cells form long terms contacts?

A

Epithelial cells and endothelial cells, which form layers, and neurones forming synapses.

strongly adhere and form specific cell-cell junctions (adherens junctions, desmosomes, tight junctions, gap junctions)

24
Q

How does cell-cell adhesion affect cell proliferation?

A

No cell-cell junctions, activated MAPK,
decreased p27KIP1, high proliferation

cell-cell junctions form, inactive MAPK,
increased p27KIP1, low proliferation

High calcium = no junctions produced. +ve Adhesion blocking
Low calcium = increased junctions formed. -ve adhesion blocking

25
Q

Describe the adherins junction?

A

Master junction - controls the formation of all the other junction types.

Molecule:
Cadherin (ca2+ depedent) - cell adhesion molecule
Beta-catenin
Alpha-catenin
Actin filament
26
Q

Describe the relevance of APC and a junction molecule.

A

APC gene-product is a protein involved in the degradation of the junction-associated molecule beta-catenin.

27
Q

beta-catenin dynamics

A

In the cytoplasma

APC complex active - rapid degradation of APC

APC complex inactive - LEF-1 –> nucleus - gene transcription leading to cell proliferation.

28
Q

What is the mechanism for contact inhibiton of proliferation?

A

when bound to cadherin at the membrane, b-catenin not available for LEF-1 binding and nuclear effects
normally, cytoplasmic b-catenin rapidly degraded
if b-catenin cytoplasmic levels rise as a result of inhibition of degradation or loss of cadherin-mediated adhesion, b-catenin/LEF-1 complex enters nucleus and influences gene expression, leading to proliferation.

29
Q

What happens when cells lose their social skills?

A
proliferate uncontrollably (lose density dependence of proliferation)
are less adherent and will multilayer (lose contact inhibition of locomotion and anchorage dependence)
epithelia breakdown cell-cell contacts 

CANCER

30
Q

What does loss of contact inhibition cause?

A

Multilayering

31
Q

Other than promoting the formation of solid tumours, what is an important consequence of loss of contact inhibition of locomotion for the progression of cancer?

A

Metastasis - helps in the invasion properties of cells. They aren’t inhibited by other cells.

32
Q

How does a primary carcinoma cell metastasise?

A
  • cell-cell adhesion must be down-regulated (e.g. cadherin levels reduced)
  • the cells must be motile
  • degradation of ECM must take place; matrix metaloproteinase (MMP) levels increased in order to migrate through basal lamina and interstitial ECM
  • the degree of carcinoma cell-cell adhesion is an indicator of how differentiated the primary tumour is, and indicates its invasiveness and the prognosis