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Dynamite News
Health
DN Bureau

Researchers identify key to epithelial cell growth

Representational Image

Melbourne [Australia]: Australian scientists have identified a novel way for epithelial cells, which form layers in organs such as the skin and stomach, to adhere to one another and perceive growth signals at these attachments, allowing them to produce tissues of the proper size and shape.

Most organ surfaces are covered by epithelial cells, which must attach to each other to form a protective and permeable barrier. They are finely constructed to be firmly sealed against diseases such as bacteria while yet allowing salts, fluids, and nutrients to be transported.

Researchers, led by Professor Kieran Harvey and Dr Benjamin Kroeger, at the Monash University Biomedicine Discovery Institute in Melbourne have discovered a new way by which epithelial cells adhere to each other in the vinegar fly, Drosophila. The study is published today in the journal, Developmental Cell.

Previous work from Professor Harvey and others led to the discovery of an important organ growth control pathway, called Hippo. First discovered in Drosophila, the Hippo pathway does effectively the same job in mammals and controls the size of different organs such as the liver and heart. The Hippo pathway is also important for human diseases as it is mutated in multiple epithelial cancers.

The new study provides further insights into how Hippo signalling is coordinated in growing tissues.

In the present study, the researchers made the important discovery of a new subcellular adhesion site that helps epithelial cells adhere to one another - termed by the researchers as "basal spot junctions". 

They showed that basal spot junctions not only helped cells adhere to one another but were important for regulating Hippo signalling. "Our discovery of basal spot junctions in epithelial tissues has given us new insights into how epithelial cells adhere to each other and how epithelial tissues grow to the right size and shape," Professor Harvey said.

These latest discoveries of how Hippo signalling operates in growing epithelial tissues are crucially important, according to Professor Harvey, because "when Hippo signalling breaks down, it can cause many types of cancers," he said.

The first ever Hippo targeted therapies are currently in clinical trials for human cancers and are showing benefit, which "will hopefully lead to better treatments for many types of epithelial cancers like mesothelioma and lung cancer," Professor Harvey said. (ANI)

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