Litcius/Paper detail

Molecular subversion of Cdc42 signalling in cancer

Natasha P. Murphy, Ana Masara binti Ahmad Mokhtar, Helen R. Mott, Darerca Owen

2021Biochemical Society Transactions33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cdc42 is a member of the Rho family of small GTPases and a master regulator of the actin cytoskeleton, controlling cell motility, polarity and cell cycle progression. This small G protein and its regulators have been the subject of many years of fruitful investigation and the advent of functional genomics and proteomics has opened up new avenues of exploration including how it functions at specific locations in the cell. This has coincided with the introduction of new structural techniques with the ability to study small GTPases in the context of the membrane. The role of Cdc42 in cancer is well established but the molecular details of its action are still being uncovered. Here we review alterations found to Cdc42 itself and to key components of the signal transduction pathways it controls in cancer. Given the challenges encountered with targeting small G proteins directly therapeutically, it is arguably the regulators of Cdc42 and the effector signalling pathways downstream of the small G protein which will be the most tractable targets for therapeutic intervention. These will require interrogation in order to fully understand the global signalling contribution of Cdc42, unlock the potential for mapping new signalling axes and ultimately produce inhibitors of Cdc42 driven signalling.

Topics & Concepts

CDC42BiologyEffectorGTPaseContext (archaeology)SignallingRegulatorCell biologySmall GTPaseSignal transductionSignal transducing adaptor proteinGTPase-activating proteinComputational biologyRas superfamilyProteomicsHedgehog signaling pathwayCancerCell signalingCancer cellCell polarityActin cytoskeletonProtein familyProtein Kinase Regulation and GTPase SignalingMicrotubule and mitosis dynamicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions