To escape the primary tumor and infiltrate stromal compartments, invasive cancer cells must traverse the basement membrane (BM). To break this dense matrix, cells develop finger-like protrusions, called invadopodia, at their ventral surface. Invadopodia secrete proteases to degrade the BM, and then elongate which allows the cell to invade the subjacent tissue. Here, we describe two complementary invasion assays. The native BM invasion assay, based on BM isolated from rat or mouse mesentery, is a physiologically significant approach for studying the stages of BM crossing at the cellular level. The Matrigel-based chemoinvasion assay is a powerful technique for studying invadopodia's molecular composition and organization at the subcellular le...
Introduction: The poor efficacy of various anti-cancer treatments against metastatic cells has focus...
Tumor metastasis is the most important reason of cancer-related death. The progress of tumor metasta...
Breast cancer cells, initially dependent on estrogen for growth, frequently progress to a more aggre...
Invasive and metastatic cells must cross basement membranes (BMs) in order to disseminate to distant...
Cancer invasion through basement membranes represents the initial step of tumor dissemination and me...
The crossing of tumor cells through basement membranes represents a critical step in the metastatic ...
The ability of tumor cells to invade is one of the hallmarks of the metastatic phenotype. To elucida...
<div><p>The ability of tumor cells to invade is one of the hallmarks of the metastatic phenotype. To...
<p>Basement membrane (BM) is the thin, dense, highly cross-linked form of extracellular matrix that ...
In vitro analyses of basement membrane invasiveness employing Matrigel (a murine tumor extract rich ...
Basement membrane (BM) is an amorphous, sheet-like structure separating the epithelium from the stro...
Invasion of extracellular matrices is crucial to a number of physiological and pathophysiological st...
The ability of cells to invade basement membranes is critical to a number of important biological pr...
Interactions between tumor cells and basement membranes represent a critical step in the progression...
1 - ArticleIntroduction: The poor efficacy of various anti-cancer treatments against metastatic cell...
Introduction: The poor efficacy of various anti-cancer treatments against metastatic cells has focus...
Tumor metastasis is the most important reason of cancer-related death. The progress of tumor metasta...
Breast cancer cells, initially dependent on estrogen for growth, frequently progress to a more aggre...
Invasive and metastatic cells must cross basement membranes (BMs) in order to disseminate to distant...
Cancer invasion through basement membranes represents the initial step of tumor dissemination and me...
The crossing of tumor cells through basement membranes represents a critical step in the metastatic ...
The ability of tumor cells to invade is one of the hallmarks of the metastatic phenotype. To elucida...
<div><p>The ability of tumor cells to invade is one of the hallmarks of the metastatic phenotype. To...
<p>Basement membrane (BM) is the thin, dense, highly cross-linked form of extracellular matrix that ...
In vitro analyses of basement membrane invasiveness employing Matrigel (a murine tumor extract rich ...
Basement membrane (BM) is an amorphous, sheet-like structure separating the epithelium from the stro...
Invasion of extracellular matrices is crucial to a number of physiological and pathophysiological st...
The ability of cells to invade basement membranes is critical to a number of important biological pr...
Interactions between tumor cells and basement membranes represent a critical step in the progression...
1 - ArticleIntroduction: The poor efficacy of various anti-cancer treatments against metastatic cell...
Introduction: The poor efficacy of various anti-cancer treatments against metastatic cells has focus...
Tumor metastasis is the most important reason of cancer-related death. The progress of tumor metasta...
Breast cancer cells, initially dependent on estrogen for growth, frequently progress to a more aggre...