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Publication : Liver endothelial E-selectin mediates carcinoma cell adhesion and promotes liver metastasis.

First Author  Brodt P Year  1997
Journal  Int J Cancer Volume  71
Issue  4 Pages  612-9
PubMed ID  9178816 Mgi Jnum  J:40671
Mgi Id  MGI:708032 Doi  10.1002/(sici)1097-0215(19970516)71:4<612::aid-ijc17>3.0.co;2-d
Citation  Brodt P, et al. (1997) Liver endothelial E-selectin mediates carcinoma cell adhesion and promotes liver metastasis. Int J Cancer 71(4):612-9
abstractText  E-selectin is a cytokine-inducible endothelial cell adhesion receptor which is involved in the process of leukocyte rolling, the first in a cascade of interactions leading to leukocyte transmigration. Several studies have implicated this receptor in carcinoma cell adhesion to the endothelium, an interaction thought to be required for tumor extravasation during metastasis. To study the role of this receptor in the process of metastasis, we utilized a murine carcinoma line H-59 which is highly metastatic to the liver in vivo. When adhesion of H-59 cells to primary cultures of murine hepatic endothelial cells was measured, it was found that the tumor cells had a low basal level of adhesion to the sinusoidal endothelial cells, which could be significantly and specifically augmented by pre-activation of the endothelial cells with rTNF alpha. This incremental increase in adhesion to the activated endothelium could be completely and specifically abolished by a neutralizing monoclonal antibody to murine E-selectin (MAb 9A9). Similar results were obtained with 2 highly metastatic human colorectal carcinoma lines, HM 7 and CX-1, but not with a second murine subline, M-27, which is poorly metastatic to the liver. To assess the role of E-selectin in metastasis to the liver in vivo, the effect of MAb 9A9 on experimental liver metastasis was evaluated using the syngeneic H-59 model. We show here that this antibody caused a marked, specific and Fc-independent inhibition of experimental liver metastasis, reducing the median number of metastases by 97% relative to the control groups. Our results provide evidence that endothelial E-selectin is a mediator of carcinoma metastasis to the liver.
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