Expression of laminin γ2 chain monomer enhances invasive growth of human carcinoma cells in vivo
✍ Scribed by Yoshiaki Tsubota; Takashi Ogawa; Jun Oyanagi; Yoji Nagashima; Kaoru Miyazaki
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 918 KB
- Volume
- 127
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Laminin γ2 chain is a subunit of the heterotrimeric basement membrane protein laminin‐332 (α3β3γ2). The γ2 chain is highly expressed by human cancers at the invasion fronts and this expression correlates with poor prognosis of the cancers. Our previous study showed that the γ2 chain is expressed as a monomer form in invading carcinoma cells. However, the role of the γ2 protein in tumor invasion remains unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the monomeric γ2 chain promotes invasive growth of human cancer cells in vivo. First, we analyzed regulatory factors for the γ2 chain expression using 2 gastric carcinoma cell lines. It was found that tumor necrosis factor‐α, by itself or in a combination with transforming growth factor‐β1, strongly induced the secretion of the monomeric γ2 chain. In addition, epidermal growth factor families appeared to function as the γ2 chain inducers in human cancers. Next, we established T‐24 bladder carcinoma cell lines expressing the full‐length or the short arm of the laminin γ2 chain. When these cell lines were i.p. injected into nude mice, they produced larger tumors in the abdominal cavity and showed much stronger invasive growth onto the diaphragms than the control cell line. The γ2‐expressing T‐24 cells often produced ascites fluid, but scarcely the control cells. In culture, the γ2‐expressing cells migrated through Matrigel more efficiently than the control cells. These findings imply that the γ2 monomer is induced in human cancers by inflammatory and stromal cytokines and promotes their invasive growth in vivo.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
BACKGROUND. The laminin-5 ␥2 chain plays an important role in cell migration during tumor invasion and tissue remodeling. METHODS. Laminin-5 ␥2 chain expression in squamous cell carcinomas of the tongue in 67 patients with Stage II, III, or IVA,B (excluding the cases with distant metastasis) was exa
## Abstract Cancer cell invasion is facilitated by extracellular matrix degrading proteases such as plasmin. We have studied the expression of plasminogen activator inhibitor‐1 (PAI‐1) and urokinase receptor (uPAR) together with the γ2‐chain of laminin‐5 (lam‐γ2) by immunohistochemistry in 20 cases