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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Implantation and subsequent placental development in many species including the human are dependent on trophoblast invasion of the uterine epithelium, the underlying basement membrane, connective tissue and blood vessels. However, trophoblast invasion in situ is strictly controlled by the microenvironment provided by the pregnant uterus. Key mechanisms underlying various steps in trophoblast invasion of basement membrane and stroma are similar to those identified in the case of invasive tumor cells: (a) attachment to basement membrane by binding to laminin and possibly other basement membrane components; (b) detachment from the basement membrane matrix prior to its penetration, a process that requires the presence of complex-type oligosaccharides on the cell surface; (c) breakdown of basement membrane components by trophoblast-derived metalloproteases (type IV and interstitial collagenase) and serine proteases (plasminogen activator).
Type IV collagenase
activity is stimulated by binding to laminin, a molecule also secreted by the trophoblast. Activation of trophoblast-derived metalloproteases appears to be plasmin-dependent. Plasmin results from the cleavage of plasminogen by trophoblast-derived plasminogen activator. Control of trophoblast invasion in situ is mediated by decidua-derived transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta) which in turn induces tissue inhibitor of metalloproteases (TIMP) both in the decidua and the trophoblast. We suggest that this control of trophoblast invasiveness is regulated both spatially as well as temporally during gestation. A preprogrammed decline in trophoblast invasiveness with increasing gestational age remains an additional possibility. The nature of the loss of control of trophoblast invasiveness in choriocarcinoma remains to be identified. Refractoriness to TGF beta action remains to strong possibility.
Cancer
Metastasis
Rev 1990 Dec
PMID:Mechanisms of trophoblast invasiveness and their control: the role of proteases and protease inhibitors. 209 85
Production of
type IV collagenase
by tumor cells has been linked to their metastatic potential in several experimental models. A possible role for this enzyme in basement membrane type IV collagen turnover has also been suggested. Two recently developed affinity-purified, monospecific antibodies directed against the amino terminus (H1), or an internal active site domain (metal binding region [MBR]) of human
type IV collagenase
, were employed in the avidin-biotin-immunoperoxidase technique in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded breast tissue samples from 55 patients. Intense cytoplasmic immunostaining of myoepithelial cells was found in normal and hyperplastic tissue, and discontinuous staining was noted in intraductal carcinomas. Luminal epithelial cells were negative or weakly positive in large- or medium-sized ducts but reacted frequently in normal terminal ducts and hyperplastic lesions. Epithelial cells in intraductal carcinomas exhibited immunoreactivity in 20 of 23 cases. Invasive carcinomas were positive in 36 of 40 cases, and metastatic cells in lymph nodes stained in 10 of 12 cases. These results support a role for
type IV collagenase
in the basement membrane remodeling of normal breast. Our findings suggest that myoepithelial cells play a pivotal role in this enzymatic activity. The high percentage of positive cells in invasive carcinomas and the strong immunoreactivity of lymph node
metastases
support the role of the enzyme in tumor invasion and metastasis and suggest that tumor cells are the essential source of the enzyme in these processes.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical distribution of type IV collagenase in normal, benign, and malignant breast tissue. 215 30
Orthotopic implantation of human colon carcinoma cells is useful for studying the behavior of metastatic subpopulations. We observed that the parental line and variants of human colon carcinoma KM12 cells were all tumorigenic following implantation into the subcutis or cecal wall of BALB/c nude mice. Their ability to
metastasize
to distant organ sites varied, however, with the site of growth. Subcutaneous (SC) tumors did not produce visceral
metastases
, whereas cecal tumors metastasized to the regional mesenteric lymph nodes and to the liver. To examine the influence of organ environment on the extracellular matrix-degrading activity of the tumors, we inoculated human colon carcinoma cells into the subcutis or cecal wall and after 7 weeks isolated and cultured the tumors in serum-free medium. The conditioned media of SC tumors contained very low levels of
type IV collagenase
(gelatinase) and heparanase (heparan sulfate-specific endo-beta-D-glucuronidase), whereas the media of the cecal wall tumors contained high levels of both. Zymograms of the media revealed that the intracecal human colon carcinomas secreted more than three times the amount of latent and active forms of 92-kd
type IV collagenase
than did the SC tumors. Moreover, only the conditioned media of intracecal tumors contained latent and active forms of 64-kd
type IV collagenase
. Histochemical analysis using rabbit antiserum raised against the synthetic peptides of 72-kd procollagenase type IV showed
type IV collagenase
in the intracecal tumors; human colon carcinoma growing SC, however, were not stained significantly. These results suggest that factors in the organ environment may affect production and secretion of tumor extracellular matrix-degrading enzymes, and these factors may modify the metastatic behavior of human colon carcinoma cells in nude mice.
...
PMID:Influence of organ environment on extracellular matrix degradative activity and metastasis of human colon carcinoma cells. 225 Mar 3
In order to investigate the role of collagenase in cancer invasion and metastasis, two collagenase activities of interstitial collagenase and type IV collagen degrading enzyme (
type IV collagenase
) were determined in 40 cases of human stomach cancer tissue. Elevated cancers which are known to have a propensity to cause blood-borne
metastases
showed higher activities of both interstitial collagenase and
type IV collagenase
than flat or ulcerous type of cancer. Using the parameters of lymph node metastasis vs tumor size or vs depth of cancerous invasion into the stomach wall, classification of the cases was attempted according to the degree of malignancy. In the cases with marked lymph node
metastases
in spite of small tumor size and/or shallow cancerous invasion into the stomach wall,
type IV collagenase
activity was higher than that in the cases with lower malignancy (p less than 0.025, p less than 0.05, respectively). These results suggest that collagenase in stomach cancer tissue play an important role in the invasion and metastasis of cancer cells.
Type IV collagenase
activity in stomach cancer tissue could be one of the useful biological markers for the degree of malignancy.
...
PMID:The collagenase activities, interstitial collagenase and type IV collagenase, in human stomach cancer: with special reference to local spreading and lymph node metastasis. 217 1
The in vivo growth behavior and invasive potential of normal and "immortalized" human bronchial epithelial cells were studied by xenotransplantation procedures, an in vitro assay of invasiveness, and determinations of
type IV collagenase
activity and mRNA expression. BEAS-2B cells, immortalized after hybrid virus infection (adenovirus 12-simian virus 40), reconstituted a columnar epithelium when xenotransplanted into de-epithelialized rat tracheas transplanted sc into athymic BALB/c mice. A few adenomatous growths could be seen 16 weeks after transplantation. BZR cells, obtained by transfer of the v-Ha-ras oncogene into BEAS-2B cells, were tumorigenic in this xenotransplantation model. BZR-T33 cells, obtained from a tumor produced after injection of BZR cells, were also tumorigenic; however, they exhibited a shorter latent period. When these same cell lines were injected sc and iv into athymic BALB/c mice, BEAS-2B cells were not tumorigenic, and the BZR-T33 cells were more tumorigenic than the BZR cells. The incidence of spontaneous
metastases
after sc inoculation was zero for BEAS-2B cells, 33% for BZR cells, and 100% for BZR-T33 cells. Similar increasing values that correlated well with the data on in vivo growth were noted in the in vitro invasion assay, the collagenolytic ability, and the mRNA expression of
type IV collagenase
. Normal human bronchial epithelial cells showed the lowest values in all the assays. These progressive changes occurring in cells derived from the same parental line indicate that the presence of the v-Ha-ras oncogene in immortalized bronchial cells is associated with a full-fledged malignant phenotype, which is further enhanced by in vivo passaging.
...
PMID:Invasive and metastatic potential of a v-Ha-ras-transformed human bronchial epithelial cell line. 253 88
The goal of this study has been to identify and characterize metalloproteinases from a highly metastatic human small cell lung cancer cell line. The cytosol isolated from NCI-H82 lung cancer cells propagated as solid tumors in nude mice contained a gelatinolytic enzyme that was subjected to ammonium sulfate precipitation, zinc chelate Sepharose column chromatography, anion exchange chromatography and gel permeation chromatography. This purification scheme resulted in a 280-fold enrichment of an active gelatin and type IV collagen-degrading enzyme. On gelatin zymography two bands of gelatinolytic activity were detected, corresponding to Mr of 75,000 and 63,000. Gelatinolytic activity was inhibited by metal chelators, tetracyclines, and serum. On immunoblotting using an affinity-purified polyclonal rabbit antibody to a peptide region of
type IV collagenase
, the tumor enzyme was identified as
type IV collagenase
. A second tumor metalloproteinase of Mr = 29,000, which degraded proteoglycan substrates, was also isolated.
Invasion
Metastasis
1989
PMID:Gelatin-degrading type IV collagenase isolated from human small cell lung cancer. 254 76
Circulating polymorphonuclear cell (PMN) levels rise in proportion to the metastatic potential of the tumor in 13762NF mammary adenocarcinoma tumor-bearing rats. These tumor-elicited PMNs (tcPMNs) secrete high levels of the basement-membrane-degrading enzymes,
type IV collagenase
and heparanase, suggesting that metastatic tumor cells stimulate neutrophilia so that the tcPMNs might assist tumor cell extravasation during metastasis. To test this hypothesis, purified proteose peptone-elicited PMNs from peritoneal exudate, circulating normal PMNs, and tcPMNs were evaluated for their effects on in vitro invasive and in vivo metastatic potentials of syngeneic 13762NF mammary adenocarcinoma tumor cells. tcPMNs caused a dose-dependent increase in invasion through a reconstituted basement membrane barrier in an in vitro invasion assay. At PMN:tumor cell ratios of 30:1, invasion potential significantly (P less than 0.05) rose to 26-fold, 40-fold, and 37-fold for poorly metastatic MTLn2 cells, highly metastatic MTLn3 cells, and moderately metastatic MTF7 cells, respectively. In contrast, purified proteose peptone-elicited PMNs and circulating normal PMNs did not significantly alter invasive potential. Intravenous coinjections of purified proteose peptone-elicited PMNs did not change the number of experimental lung metastases, but tcPMNs at ratios to 50:1 significantly raised the mean number of
metastases
23-fold for MTLn2, 3- to 4-fold for MTLn3, and 1.6- to 1.8-fold for MTF7. These results demonstrate that tcPMNs contribute to the metastatic propensity of mammary adenocarcinoma clones by increasing efficiency of invasion through basement membrane.
...
PMID:Tumor-elicited polymorphonuclear cells, in contrast to "normal" circulating polymorphonuclear cells, stimulate invasive and metastatic potentials of rat mammary adenocarcinoma cells. 276 1
Cancer invasion and
metastases
is a complex multi-step process. In order for a tumor cell to successfully traverse all the steps of this process and initiate a metastatic colony, it must express the right combination of gene products. Such gene products may include proteins which regulate cell interaction with the basement membrane and cell motility. Tumor cells attach to the basement membrane glycoprotein laminin via the cell surface laminin receptor. The human laminin receptor was purified and molecularly cloned. The level of laminin receptor mRNA in a variety of human carcinoma cells correlated with the number of laminin receptors on the surface of these cells. Following attachment to the basement membrane, the tumor cell next secretes proteases which may degrade type IV collagen. A genetic linkage between
type IV collagenase
secretion and
metastases
was collagen. A genetic linkage between
type IV collagenase
secretion and
metastases
was studied using our new genetic system for inducing
metastases
by employing the ras oncogene. Following attachment and local proteolysis, the third step of invasion is tumor cell motility. We have isolated a tumor cell autocrine motility factor (AMF). This factor is secreted by the tumor cells and binds to a cell surface receptor, resulting in a profound (greater than 100 x) stimulation of cell locomotion. AMF may play a major role in the autonomous invasive behavior of tumor cells.
...
PMID:Biochemical mechanisms of tumor invasion and metastasis. 283 60
Cancer invasion and
metastases
is a complex multistep process. In order for a tumor cell to successfully traverse all the steps of this process and initiate a metastatic colony, it must express the right combination of gene products. Such gene products may include proteins which regulate cell interaction with the basement membrane and cell motility. Tumor cells attach to the basement membrane glycoprotein laminin via the cell surface laminin receptor. The human laminin receptor was purified and molecularly cloned. The level of laminin receptor mRNA is a variety of human carcinoma cells correlated with the number of laminin receptors on the cell surface of these cells. Following attachment to the basement membrane, the tumor cell next secretes proteases which may degrade type IV collagen. A genetic linkage between
type IV collagenase
secretion and
metastases
was studied using our new genetic system for inducing
metastases
employing the ras oncogene. Following attachment and local proteolysis, the third step of invasion is tumor cell motility. We have isolated a tumor cell autocrine motility factor (AMF). This factor is secreted by the tumor cells and binds to a cell surface receptor resulting in a profound (greater than 100x) stimulation of cell locomotion. AMF may play a major role in the autonomous invasive behavior of tumor cells.
...
PMID:Biochemical mechanisms of tumor invasion and metastases. 283 81
We analyze here recent data from literature concerning the role of collagenases in cancer. The alteration of basement membrane (BM) and extracellular matrix components, in particular collagens, has been widely reported during tumor invasion. The collagenases degrade interstitial collagens (types I and III) and BM collagens (type IV). So, they break natural barriers and allow tumor cells to spread in surrounding tissues and
metastasize
. Classical collagenases are not able to degrade type IV collagen (the main component of BM) which, however, often appears to be very altered around tumor cells. Therefore, the existence of a specific
type IV collagenase
is necessary to explain this phenomenon. Most studies performed with the object of proving the role of collagenases in tumor invasion and metastasis have shown the presence of a type I collagenase, but
type IV collagenase
has been more difficult to evidence.
...
PMID:[Collagenases and cancers]. 285 69
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