The study of cell adhesion is part of cell biology. Cells are often not found in isolation, rather they tend to stick to other cells or non-cellular components of their environment. A fundamental question is: what makes cells sticky? Cell adhesion generally involves protein molecules at the surface of cells, so the study of cell adhesion involves cell adhesion proteins and the molecules that they bind to.
Proteins are often transmembrane receptors. Transmembrane cell adhesion proteins extend across the cell surface membrane and typically have domains that extend into both the extracellular space and the intracellular space. The extracellular domain of a cell adhesion protein can bind to other molecules that might be either on the surface of an adjacent cell (cell-to-cell adhesion) or part of the extracellular matrix (cell-to-ECM adhesion). The molecule that a cell adhesion protein binds to is called its ligand. There are families of cell adhesion proteins that can be characterized in terms of the structure of the adhesion proteins and their ligands. Adhesion between two copies of the same adhesion protein is called "homophilic" binding. Adhesion between an adhesion protein and some other molecule is "heterophilic" binding.
| Family | Ligands | Interactions |
|---|---|---|
| Selectins | Carbohydrates | heterophilic |
| Integrins | Extracellular matrix | heterophilic |
| Ig superfamily proteins | heterophilic | |
| Ig superfamily proteins | Integrins | heterophilic |
| Ig superfamily proteins | homophilic | |
| Cadherins | Cadherins | homophilic |
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"Cell adhesion".
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