| David
Sherwood, Biology
My group is interested in understanding the mechanisms
that regulate the ability of cells to invade through
basement membranes. Cell invasion is crucial for many
developmental processes and human diseases, and remains
the least understood aspect in the progression of metastatic
cancer. An understanding of the mechanisms that control
cell invasion has been limited by the lack of in vivo
models where the interactions of the invading cell
and basement membrane can be visualized and genetically
dissected. Anchor cell invasion into the vulval epithelium
in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans represents a new model where
such analysis is possible. Connection of the uterus and vulva in C. elegans is
initiated by the uterine anchor cell, whose basolateral portion crosses the
basement membranes separating both tissues, and then invades between the central
vulval cells. Anchor cell invasion is regulated by: (1) the precise removal
of the basement membranes by the anchor cell during invasion; (2) a diffusible
cue generated by the central vulval cells that stimulates and targets anchor
cell invasion; (3) production of mesenchymal-like invasive protrusions from
the basolateral region of the anchor cell. Our group utilizes genetic, genomic
and cell biological approaches to identify and characterize the regulatory
networks that control anchor cell invasion. Initial studies indicate that many
of these mechanisms are conserved with vertebrate cell invasion in development,
as well as in cancer progression. Specific projects in the lab include: 1)
Identifying Fos-1 transcriptional targets that promote basement membrane removal
during invasion, (2) time-lapse analysis of anchor cell invasion using GFP
variant tagged anchor cell and basement membrane components, (3) characterizing
new genes recently identified as promoting anchor cell invasion and whole genome
RNAi and EMS screens to identify additional genes, (4) understanding basement
membrane composition and the regulation of invasive-behavior, (5) investigating
the evolution of cell-invasive mechanisms, and (6) identifying and characterizing
additional cell-invasion events in C. elegans development.
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