Entosis: Cell-in-Cell Formation that Kills Through Entotic Cell Death.

O Florey, S E Kim, M Overholtzer
Author Information
  1. M Overholtzer: Cell Biology Program, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10065, USA. overhom1@mskcc.org.

Abstract

Entosis is a cell-in-cell formation mechanism that targets viable cells for uptake in epithelial cell cultures and human tumors. Entotic cells control their own engulfment, by invading into their hosts in a Rho-GTPase and actomyosin-dependent manner. Although entotic cells are internalized while alive, most eventually undergo a non-apoptotic form of cell death, called entotic cell death, that is executed non-cell-autonomously by autophagy proteins and lysosomes. Here we review the current understanding of entosis and entotic cell death and discuss the potential roles of this process in cancer.

Grants

  1. 16337/Cancer Research UK
  2. R01CA154649/NCI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Animals
Apoptosis
Cell Death
Entosis
Humans