A review on regulation of cell cycle by extracellular matrix

Int J Biol Macromol. 2023 Mar 31:232:123426. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.123426. Epub 2023 Jan 25.

Abstract

The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a network of structural proteins, glycoproteins and proteoglycans that assists independent cells in aggregating and forming highly organized functional structures. ECM serves numerous purposes and is an essential component of tissue structure and functions. Initially, the role of ECM was considered to be confined to passive functions like providing mechanical strength and structural identity to tissues, serving as barriers and platforms for cells. The doors to understanding ECM's proper role in tissue functioning opened with the discovery of cellular receptors, integrins to which ECM components binds and influences cellular activities. Understanding and utilizing ECM's potential to control cellular function has become a topic of much interest in recent decades, providing different outlooks to study processes involved in developmental programs, wound healing and tumour progression. On another front, the regulatory mechanisms operating to prevent errors in the cell cycle have been topics of a titanic amount of studies. This is expected as many diseases, most infamously cancer, are associated with defects in their functioning. This review focuses on how ECM, through different methods, influences the progression of the somatic cell cycle and provides deeper insights into molecular mechanisms of functional communication between adhesion complex, signalling pathways and cell cycle machinery.

Keywords: Cancer and metastasis; Cell cycle regulation; Extracellular matrix; Tissue engineering.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cell Cycle
  • Extracellular Matrix Proteins / metabolism
  • Extracellular Matrix* / metabolism
  • Glycoproteins / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Neoplasms* / metabolism
  • Proteoglycans / metabolism

Substances

  • Proteoglycans
  • Glycoproteins
  • Extracellular Matrix Proteins