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Interactions between laminin and epithelial cells in intestinal
health and disease.Expert
Rev Mol Med. 2001 Sep 28;3(24):1-18.
Laminins are
a multigene family of extracellular matrix molecules.
Quantitatively, they are one of the most abundant glycoproteins
present in basement membranes. Functionally, they can modulate
several key biological activities, including cell adhesion and
migration, gene expression and cell survival. Variability in the
spatial and temporal expression of laminins, as well as of their
specific receptors of the integrin family, in various tissues and
organs, suggests that different laminins perform distinct
functions. This article focuses on the human intestinal epithelium
as a paradigm to illustrate the potential relationship between
laminin-cell interactions and the cell state. This rapidly
renewing epithelium consists of spatially separated proliferative
and differentiated cell populations located in the crypts and on
the villi, respectively. Differential distributions of the various
laminins and laminin-binding integrins have been observed along
the crypt-villus axis in both the developing and the adult
intestine, and important alterations in the pattern of laminin
expression have been reported in various intestinal pathologies,
such as tufting enteropathy, Crohn's disease and ulcerative
colitis, and colorectal cancer. More-direct approaches, including
experimentation with in vitro and in vivo models, have provided
evidence in support of a role for laminins in intestinal cell
functions. Although further work is still needed, laminins emerge
more and more as key regulators of specific cell functions
important in both intestinal health and intestinal disease.
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