REVIEW ARTICLE
Integrins: versatile receptors controlling melanocyte adhesion, migration and proliferation
Article first published online: 9 DEC 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-148X.2010.00806.x
© 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S
Additional Information
How to Cite
Pinon, P. and Wehrle-Haller, B. (2011), Integrins: versatile receptors controlling melanocyte adhesion, migration and proliferation. Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research, 24: 282–294. doi: 10.1111/j.1755-148X.2010.00806.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 10 MAR 2011
- Article first published online: 9 DEC 2010
- Accepted manuscript online: 18 NOV 2010 10:39AM EST
- PUBLICATION DATA Received 9 September 2010, revised and accepted for publication 15 November 2010, published online 18 November 2010
- Abstract
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Keywords:
- melanocytes;
- melanoma, integrin;
- clustering;
- adhesion;
- migration;
- talin;
- invasion;
- extracellular matrix;
- stiffness;
- PI(4,5)P2
Summary
From the onset of melanocyte specification from the neural crest, throughout their migration during embryogenesis and until they reside in their niche in the basal keratinocyte layer, melanocytes interact in dynamic ways with the extracellular environment of the growing embryo. To recognize and to adhere to their environment, melanocytes depend on heterodimeric cell surface receptors of the family of integrins. In addition to the control of adhesive interactions between melanocytes and the extracellular matrix scaffold secreted by fibroblasts and keratinocytes, the integrin receptors allow cells also to sense the mechanical condition of the extracellular environment, responding by intracellular signaling, triggering cell survival, proliferation or migration events. In this review, we summarize the recently emerged concepts that explain integrin-dependent adhesion and how this adhesion system interfaces with integrin-dependent signaling events. The gained information will help to understand melanocyte behavior in pathological situations such as melanoma growth and metastasis formation.

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