The role of polarity in cancer is an emerging research area and loss of polarity is widely considered an important event in cancer.Among the polarity regulating molecules, the small GTPase Cdc42 was extensively studied.Most attention was given to Cdc42 signaling at the plasma membrane, but whether and how Cdc42 is regulated at endomembranes remained poorly understood.Moreover, whether the endomembrane pool of Cdc42 is of any relevance to cell polarity was unknown.In our recent work, we identified a complex between the Golgi matrix protein GM130 and RasGRF and showed that it is responsible for regulating the Golgi pool of Cdc42, but had no effect on the plasma membrane pool of Cdc42.Depletion of GM130 disrupted apico-basal polarity as well as front-rear polarity, indicating that the spatial pool of Cdc42 is functionally relevant.The biomedical relevance of this finding was supported by the observation than GM130 is progressively lost in colorectal cancer.These findings support a role of the endomembrane pool of Cdc42 in cell polarity and point to a potential role of alterations of this pool in cancer.
CITATION STYLE
Baschieri, F., & Farhan, H. (2015). Endomembrane control of cell polarity: Relevance to cancer. Small GTPases, 6(2), 104–107. https://doi.org/10.1080/21541248.2015.1018402
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