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DOI: 10.1146/annurev.cellbio.24.110707.175315
OpenAccess: Closed
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Navigating ECM Barriers at the Invasive Front: The Cancer Cell–Stroma Interface

R. Grant Rowe,Stephen J. Weiss

Biology
Extracellular matrix
Stromal cell
2009
A seminal event in cancer progression is the ability of the neoplastic cell to mobilize the necessary machinery to breach surrounding extracellular matrix barriers while orchestrating a host stromal response that ultimately supports tissue-invasive and metastatic processes. With over 500 proteolytic enzymes identified in the human genome, interconnecting webs of protease-dependent and protease-independent processes have been postulated to drive the cancer cell invasion program via schemes of daunting complexity. Increasingly, however, a body of evidence has begun to emerge that supports a unifying model wherein a small group of membrane-tethered enzymes, termed the membrane-type matrix metalloproteinases (MT-MMPs), plays a dominant role in regulating cancer cell, as well as stromal cell, traffic through the extracellular matrix barriers assembled by host tissues in vivo. Understanding the mechanisms that underlie the regulation and function of these metalloenzymes as host cell populations traverse the dynamic extracellular matrix assembled during neoplastic states should provide new and testable theories regarding cancer invasion and metastasis.
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    Navigating ECM Barriers at the Invasive Front: The Cancer Cell–Stroma Interface” is a paper by R. Grant Rowe Stephen J. Weiss published in 2009. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.