| Figure 7. Network of protein
connections hooks normal epithelial cells tightly in place in a tissue.
E-cadherin molecules span the membranes of epithelial
cells and hook into E-cadherin molecules on adjacent cells. E-cadherin
also projects into the cell's interior and hooks into the proteinacious
skeleton, called the cytoskeleton, which supports the cellular structure.
E-cadherin links with actin molecules in the
cytoskeleton via a set of molecules called catenins. Epithelial cells are
also molecularly connected with collagen and other proteins in the basal
lamina.
Integrins spanning the epithelial-cell membrane bind
with fibronectin, which in turn binds with collagen in the basal lamina.
Like E-cadherin, integrin molecules also project into the epithelial-cell
interior and bind with actin in the cytoskeleton.
Before cancer cells can spread to foreign organs,
they must break all of these bonds. |