Rebelo Thalia M, Chetty Carryn J, Ferreira Eloise, Weiss Stefan F T
School of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Republic of South Africa (RSA).
BMC Cancer. 2016 Nov 24;16(1):917. doi: 10.1186/s12885-016-2953-2.
Cancer has become a global burden due to its high incidence and mortality rates, with an estimated 14.1 million cancer cases reported worldwide in 2012 particularly as a result of metastasis. Metastasis involves two crucial steps: adhesion and invasion, and the non-integrin receptor; the 37-kDa/67-kDa laminin receptor precursor/ high affinity laminin receptor (LRP/LR) has been shown to be overexpressed on the surface of tumorigenic cells, thus being implicated in the enhancement of these two crucial steps. The current study investigated the role of LRP/LR on the aggressiveness of pancreatic cancer (AsPC-1) and neuroblastoma (IMR-32) cells with respect to their adhesive and invasive potential.
AsPC-1 and IMR-32 cells were utilized as the experimental cell lines for the study. Cell surface LRP/LR levels were visualised and quantified on the experimental and control (MCF-7) cell lines via confocal microscopy and flow cytometry, respectively. Total LRP/LR levels in the cell lines were assessed by Western blotting and the adhesive and invasive potential of the above-mentioned cell lines was determined before and after supplementation with the anti-LRP/LR specific antibody IgG1-iS18. Statistical significance of the data was confirmed via the use of the two-tailed student's t-test and Pearson's correlation coefficient.
Flow cytometry revealed that AsPC-1 and IMR-32 cells displayed significantly higher cell surface LRP/LR levels in comparison to the MCF-7 control cell line. However, Western blotting and subsequent densitometric analysis revealed that all three tumorigenic cell lines displayed no significant difference in total LRP/LR levels. The treatment of AsPC-1 and IMR-32 cells with IgG1-iS18 caused a significant reduction in the adhesive and invasive potential of the cells to laminin-1 and through the ECM-like Matrigel™, respectively. Pearson's correlation coefficients indicated a high correlation, thus suggesting a directly proportional relationship between cell surface LRP/LR levels and the adhesive and invasive potential of AsPC-1 and IMR-32 cells.
These findings suggest that through the interference of the LRP/LR-laminin-1 interaction, the anti-LRP/LR specific antibody IgG1-iS18 may act as an alternative therapeutic tool for the treatment of metastatic pancreatic cancer and neuroblastoma.
癌症因其高发病率和死亡率已成为全球负担,2012年全球估计报告有1410万例癌症病例,尤其是由于转移所致。转移涉及两个关键步骤:黏附和侵袭,以及非整合素受体;37 kDa/67 kDa层粘连蛋白受体前体/高亲和力层粘连蛋白受体(LRP/LR)已被证明在致瘤细胞表面过度表达,因此与这两个关键步骤的增强有关。本研究调查了LRP/LR对胰腺癌(AsPC-1)和神经母细胞瘤(IMR-32)细胞侵袭性的作用,涉及它们的黏附及侵袭潜能。
将AsPC-1和IMR-32细胞用作本研究的实验细胞系。通过共聚焦显微镜和流式细胞术分别对实验细胞系和对照(MCF-7)细胞系的细胞表面LRP/LR水平进行可视化和定量分析。通过蛋白质印迹法评估细胞系中的总LRP/LR水平,并在补充抗LRP/LR特异性抗体IgG1-iS18之前和之后测定上述细胞系的黏附及侵袭潜能。通过使用双尾学生t检验和皮尔逊相关系数来确认数据的统计学显著性。
流式细胞术显示,与MCF-7对照细胞系相比,AsPC-1和IMR-32细胞的细胞表面LRP/LR水平显著更高。然而,蛋白质印迹法及随后的密度分析显示,所有三种致瘤细胞系的总LRP/LR水平均无显著差异。用IgG1-iS18处理AsPC-1和IMR-32细胞分别导致细胞对层粘连蛋白-1的黏附潜能以及穿过类细胞外基质基质胶的侵袭潜能显著降低。皮尔逊相关系数表明存在高度相关性,因此表明细胞表面LRP/LR水平与AsPC-1和IMR-32细胞的黏附及侵袭潜能之间呈正比关系。
这些发现表明,通过干扰LRP/LR-层粘连蛋白-1相互作用,抗LRP/LR特异性抗体IgG1-iS18可能作为治疗转移性胰腺癌和神经母细胞瘤的替代治疗工具。