AI Article Synopsis

  • Large gaps in the basement membrane (BM) can occur during organ remodeling and cancer cell invasion, with a focus on uterine-vulval attachment in rhabditid nematodes.
  • Researchers found that a non-dividing vulval cell always bounds the BM gap, while actively dividing vulval cells contribute to the enlargement of this gap by facilitating BM movement.
  • Manipulating the cell cycle demonstrated that stopping division constrains BM movement and gap size, and the accumulation of laminin at the gap edge helps stabilize it by increasing integrin levels in non-dividing cells.

Article Abstract

Large gaps in basement membrane (BM) occur during organ remodelling and cancer cell invasion. Whether dividing cells, which temporarily reduce their attachment to BM, influence these breaches is unknown. Here we analyse uterine-vulval attachment during development across 21 species of rhabditid nematodes and find that the BM gap that forms between these organs is always bounded by a non-dividing vulval cell. Through cell cycle manipulation and live cell imaging in Caenorhabditis elegans, we show that actively dividing vulval cells facilitate enlargement of this breach by promoting BM movement. In contrast, targeted cell cycle arrest halts BM movement and limits gap opening. Further, we demonstrate that the BM component laminin accumulates at the BM gap edge and promotes increased integrin levels in non-dividing vulval cells, stabilizing gap position. Together, these studies reveal that cell division can be used as a mechanism to regulate BM breaches, thus controlling the exchange of cells between tissues.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4138880PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms5184DOI Listing

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