Progress in epithelial-mesenchymal transition research


Autoria(s): Newgreen, D.F.; Thompson, E.W.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

The field of research of epithelial-mesenchymal transitions, EMT, and its reverse, mesenchymal-epithelial transitions, MET, has expanded very rapidly indeed from its beginnings, heralded by Professor Betty Hay in the 1970s and 1980s. This expansion has involved the realisation that the EMT was not just an interesting phenomenon of early developmental morphogenetic cell behaviour, but bore remarkable resemblance to clinically crucial pathological events in cancer invasion. Not surprisingly, this discipline soon became numerically dominant in the EMT publication field. Simultaneously, the EMT concept has been extended to normal physiological wound healing. Exploration revealed that these resemblances were more than skin deep: the same sets of growth factors, receptors, transcription factors, epigenetic marks and signalling pathways turned up repeatedly in EMTs and METs in a variety of contexts, both pathological and normal. This molecular genetic research in turn uncovered similarities of the EMT signature to that of fibrosis, a set of diseases which is of enormous clinical importance, rivalling that of cancer. Most recently, and more surprisingly, the EMT signature has shown considerable similarity to that found in stem cell and cancer stem cell biology.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/71131/

Publicador

S. Karger AG

Relação

http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84878924778&partnerID=40&md5=f6a9574f90aafcd33264719df6df048c

DOI:10.1159/000351732

Newgreen, D.F. & Thompson, E.W. (2013) Progress in epithelial-mesenchymal transition research. Cells, Tissues, Organs, 197(6), pp. 421-423.

Fonte

Faculty of Health

Tipo

Journal Article