Cell invasion through the basement membrane, a process important for both development and disease pathogenesis, depends on an interplay of adhesive, force transducing, proteolytic, and chemotactic machineries. The mechanisms whereby these different processes are integrated on the cellular level have remained elusive. In this issue of Developmental Cell, Sherwood and coworkers now identify integrins as integration platforms for a specialized invasive membrane domain in C. elegans
Despite profound importance in development and cancer, the extracellular cues that target cell invas...
SummaryCellular invasion through protein matrices is a critical process during epithelial–mesenchyma...
Integrins have key functions in cell adhesion and migration. How integrins are dynamically relocaliz...
Cell invasion through the basement membrane, a process important for both development and disease pa...
SummaryIntegrin expression and activity have been strongly correlated with developmental and patholo...
How cells breach basement membrane barriers remains an area of active research. In this issue of Dev...
Cell invasion through the basement membrane, a process important for both development and disease pa...
AbstractIntegrins are cell surface receptors of the extracellular matrix present in all animals. Gen...
Integrins are heterodimeric receptors that mediate important cell functions, including cell adhesion...
Integrin is a heterodimeric cell surface receptor for extracellular matrix (ECM) and plays essential...
<p>Basement membrane (BM) is the thin, dense, highly cross-linked form of extracellular matrix that ...
<p>Basement membrane (BM) is a dense, conserved sheet-like extracellular matrix that provides struct...
Large gaps in basement membrane (BM) occur at sites of cell invasion and tissue remodelling in devel...
The integrins are a superfamily of cell adhesion receptors that bind to extracellular matrix ligands...
<p>Basement membranes are a dense, sheet-like form of extracellular matrix that underlie epithelia a...
Despite profound importance in development and cancer, the extracellular cues that target cell invas...
SummaryCellular invasion through protein matrices is a critical process during epithelial–mesenchyma...
Integrins have key functions in cell adhesion and migration. How integrins are dynamically relocaliz...
Cell invasion through the basement membrane, a process important for both development and disease pa...
SummaryIntegrin expression and activity have been strongly correlated with developmental and patholo...
How cells breach basement membrane barriers remains an area of active research. In this issue of Dev...
Cell invasion through the basement membrane, a process important for both development and disease pa...
AbstractIntegrins are cell surface receptors of the extracellular matrix present in all animals. Gen...
Integrins are heterodimeric receptors that mediate important cell functions, including cell adhesion...
Integrin is a heterodimeric cell surface receptor for extracellular matrix (ECM) and plays essential...
<p>Basement membrane (BM) is the thin, dense, highly cross-linked form of extracellular matrix that ...
<p>Basement membrane (BM) is a dense, conserved sheet-like extracellular matrix that provides struct...
Large gaps in basement membrane (BM) occur at sites of cell invasion and tissue remodelling in devel...
The integrins are a superfamily of cell adhesion receptors that bind to extracellular matrix ligands...
<p>Basement membranes are a dense, sheet-like form of extracellular matrix that underlie epithelia a...
Despite profound importance in development and cancer, the extracellular cues that target cell invas...
SummaryCellular invasion through protein matrices is a critical process during epithelial–mesenchyma...
Integrins have key functions in cell adhesion and migration. How integrins are dynamically relocaliz...