Intercellular junctions play a pivotal role in tissue development and function and also in tumorigenesis. In epithelial cells, decrease or loss of E-cadherin, the hallmark molecule of adherens junctions (AJs), and increase of N-cadherin are widely thought to promote carcinoma progression and metastasis. In this paper, we show that this "cadherin switch" hypothesis does not hold for diverse endoderm-derived cells and cells of tumors derived from them. We show that the cadherins in a major portion of AJs in these cells can be chemically cross-linked in E-N heterodimers. We also show that cells possessing E-N heterodimer AJs can form semistable hemihomotypic AJs with purely N-cadherin-based AJs of mesenchymally derived cells, including stroma cells. We conclude that these heterodimers are the major AJ constituents of several endoderm-derived tissues and tumors and that the prevailing concept of antagonistic roles of these two cadherins in developmental and tumor biology has to be reconsidered. © 2011 Straub et al.
CITATION STYLE
Straub, B. K., Rickelt, S., Zimbelmann, R., Grund, C., Kuhn, C., Iken, M., … Franke, W. W. (2011). E-N-cadherin heterodimers define novel adherens junctions connecting endoderm-derived cells. Journal of Cell Biology, 195(5), 873–887. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201106023
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