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Borghi Lab – Trafficking in cancer: from gene deregulation to altered organelles and emerging biophysical properties

L’équipe Borghi a publié une revue dans Front. Cell Dev:

Trafficking in cancer: from gene deregulation to altered organelles and emerging biophysical properties

 

Résumé :

Intracellular trafficking supports all cell functions maintaining the exchange of material between membrane-bound organelles and the plasma membrane during endocytosis, cargo sorting, and exocytosis/secretion. Several proteins of the intracellular trafficking machinery are deregulated in diseases, particularly cancer. This complex and deadly disease stays a heavy burden for society, despite years of intense research activity. Here, we give an overview about trafficking proteins and highlight that in addition to their molecular functions, they contribute to the emergence of intracellular organelle landscapes. We review recent evidence of organelle landscape alterations in cancer. We argue that focusing on organelles, which represent the higher-order, cumulative behavior of trafficking regulators, could help to better understand, describe and fight cancer. In particular, we propose adopting a physical framework to describe the organelle landscape, with the goal of identifying the key parameters that are crucial for a stable and non-random organelle organization characteristic of healthy cells. By understanding these parameters, we may gain insights into the mechanisms that lead to a pathological organelle spatial organization, which could help explain the plasticity of cancer cells.

 

Patat J, Schauer K, Lachuer H. Trafficking in cancer: from gene deregulation to altered organelles and emerging biophysical properties. Front Cell Dev Biol. 2025 Jan 20;12:1491304. doi: 10.3389/fcell.2024.1491304. PMID: 39902278; PMCID: PMC11788300.