- independent adhesion molecules EpCAM and Trop-2. Matriptase activation cleaves these CAMs into two-chain forms, promoting internalization and degradation, followed by replenishment through new synthesis. This turnover enables rapid adaptation of adhesion to environmental cues. Loss of matriptase disrupts this cycle, impairing epithelial integrity, extrusion, mitosis, and collective migration. Matriptase activity is tightly controlled by zymogen activation and inhibition by HAI-1, restricting CAM cleavage. Environmental factors, including pH, redox state, and chloride levels, modulate activation, linking external stimuli to adhesion remodeling. This protease-driven pathway provides a rapid, adaptable system for epithelial adhesion control.
Kao et al. (Tue,) studied this question.