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Sci. STKE, 10 April 2007 REVIEWSSequestration and Segregation of Receptor Kinases in Epithelial Cells: Implications for ErbB2 OncogenesisCoralie A. Carothers Carraway and Kermit L. Carraway* Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Cell Biology and Anatomy, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL 33136, USA. Abstract:
Cell behaviors are regulated by signaling pathways triggered by the activation of cell surface receptors. A key aspect of receptor signaling is the location of these receptors relative to their ligands and to other receptors, particularly in epithelia, whose cells are polarized by tight junction barriers into apical and basolateral membrane regions. In polarized epithelia, the co-receptor ErbB2 is often localized to the apical surface by its intramembrane ligand Muc4, thus segregating it from its partner ErbB3, which is sequestered at the lateral surface, co-localized with cadherin junctions. The ErbB2-ErbB3 receptor heterodimer, when activated, is a potent stimulator of cell proliferation; thus, the segregation mechanism helps maintain these cells in a differentiated state. Similarly, epidermal growth factor, the ligand for ErbB1, which is present in the apical fluid of some epithelia, is segregated from its receptor by the tight junction barrier. Loss of cell polarity and the tight junction barrier facilitates the interaction of ErbB2 with the hemidesmosome integrin *Corresponding author. E-mail: kcarrawa{at}med.miami.edu
Citation: C. A. C. Carraway, K. L. Carraway, Sequestration and Segregation of Receptor Kinases in Epithelial Cells: Implications for ErbB2 Oncogenesis. Sci. STKE 2007, re3 (2007). The editors suggest the following Related Resources on Science sites:In Science Signaling
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Science Signaling. ISSN 1937-9145 (online), 1945-0877 (print). Pre-2008: Science's STKE. ISSN 1525-8882