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Publication : Integrin-ECM interactions regulate the changes in cell shape driving the morphogenesis of the Drosophila wing epithelium.

First Author  Domínguez-Giménez Paloma Year  2007
Journal  J Cell Sci Volume  120
Pages  1061-71 PubMed ID  17327274
Abstract Text  During development, morphogenesis involves migration and changes in the shape of epithelial sheets, both of which require coordination of cell adhesion. Thus, while modulation of integrin-mediated adhesion to the ECM regulates epithelial motility, cell-cell adhesion via cadherins controls the remodelling of epithelial sheets. We have used the Drosophila wing epithelium to demonstrate that cell-ECM interactions mediated by integrins also regulate the changes in cell shape that underly epithelial morphogenesis. We show that integrins control the transitions from columnar to cuboidal cell shape underlying wing formation, and we demonstrate that eliminating the ECM has the same effect on cell shape as inhibiting integrin function. Furthermore, lack of integrin activity also induces detachment of the basal lamina and failure to assemble the basal matrix. Hence, we propose that integrins control epithelial cell shape by mediating adherence of these cells to the ECM. Finally, we show that the ECM has an instructive rather than a structural role, because inhibition of Raf reverses the cell shape changes caused by perturbing integrins. Doi  10.1242/jcs.03404
Issue  Pt 6 Month  Mar

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