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Fibulin-2 is a known component of the extracellular matrix (the supportive protein structure surrounding cells) and is thought to be critical for cell migration during wound healing. However, loss of Fibulin-2 in breast cancer may lead to changes in the environment surrounding, and confining, cancer cells, thus enabling cancer cells to migrate from their original site to other locations.
Fibulin-2's potential involvement in breast cancer spread may provide prognostic implications if loss of its expression can be directly correlated with the transition from noninvasive breast cancer to recurrent and/or invasive breast cancer. Future studies will explore the exact mechanisms by which Fibulin-2 mediates its anti-invasion effect.
This work was lead by Dr. Michael A. Hollingsworth at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, and supported by the Department of Defense and the National Institutes of Health.-American Journal of Pathology