Kobayashi H, Gotoh J, Kanayama N, Hirashima Y, Terao T, Sugino D
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, Handacho, Japan.
Cancer Res. 1995 May 1;55(9):1847-52.
Urinary trypsin inhibitor (UTI) has a multipotent inhibitory effect on proteases such as trypsin, chymotrypsin, plasmin, human leukocyte elastase, or hyaluronidase. UTI can bind easily to its receptors on various types of tumor cells (human ovarian cancer HOC-I cells, human choriocarcinoma SMT-cc1 cells, and murine Lewis lung carcinoma 3LL cells). Our results show that the UTI receptors of some tumor cells have a possible role in modulating plasmin activity on the cell surface and prevention of tumor cell invasion and metastasis (H. Kobayashi et al., J. Biol. Chem., 269; 20642-20647, 1994). UTI interacts with tumor cells as a negative modulator of the invasive cells. We investigated whether this effect may be mediated by UTI binding to the cell surface receptors. In addition, the role of peptide sequences from each UTI domain and their interaction with tumor cells were investigated. UTI derivatized with biotin or FITC was taken up by tumor cells in a dose-dependent manner. This cell association was inhibited with a monoclonal antibody D1, which specifically recognizes NH2 terminus (domain I) of UTI. The binding was inhibited by fluid phase UTI, but not HI-8, COOH terminus (domain II) of UTI, suggesting that UTI binds to cells through a site in the UTI domain I. Furthermore, we found that UTI, HI-8 and a number of peptides containing Arg-Gly-Pro-Cys-Arg-Ala-Phe-Ile promoted the inhibition of tumor cell invasion. This site corresponds to the plasmin-inhibiting domain within HI-8. The possibility that UTI binding to tumor cells might be involved in the prevention of tumor cell invasion in vitro was excluded since HI-8, lacking domain I, promotes the inhibition of tumor cell invasion with essentially the same affinity as UTI. All these data allow us to conclude that inhibition of tumor cell invasion is mediated by domain II, which possesses anti-plasmin activity.
尿胰蛋白酶抑制剂(UTI)对胰蛋白酶、糜蛋白酶、纤溶酶、人白细胞弹性蛋白酶或透明质酸酶等蛋白酶具有多效抑制作用。UTI能轻松结合多种类型肿瘤细胞(人卵巢癌HOC-I细胞、人绒毛膜癌SMT-cc1细胞和小鼠Lewis肺癌3LL细胞)表面的受体。我们的研究结果表明,某些肿瘤细胞的UTI受体可能在调节细胞表面纤溶酶活性以及预防肿瘤细胞侵袭和转移方面发挥作用(H. Kobayashi等人,《生物化学杂志》,269卷;20642 - 20647页,1994年)。UTI作为侵袭性细胞的负调节剂与肿瘤细胞相互作用。我们研究了这种效应是否可能由UTI与细胞表面受体的结合介导。此外,还研究了UTI各结构域的肽序列的作用及其与肿瘤细胞的相互作用。用生物素或异硫氰酸荧光素(FITC)衍生化的UTI以剂量依赖的方式被肿瘤细胞摄取。这种细胞结合被单克隆抗体D1抑制,该抗体特异性识别UTI的NH2末端(结构域I)。结合被液相UTI抑制,但不被UTI的HI-8、COOH末端(结构域II)抑制,这表明UTI通过UTI结构域I中的一个位点与细胞结合。此外,我们发现UTI、HI-8以及一些含有精氨酸 - 甘氨酸 - 脯氨酸 - 半胱氨酸 - 精氨酸 - 丙氨酸 - 苯丙氨酸 - 异亮氨酸的肽促进了对肿瘤细胞侵袭的抑制。该位点对应于HI-8内的纤溶酶抑制结构域。由于缺乏结构域I的HI-8以与UTI基本相同的亲和力促进对肿瘤细胞侵袭的抑制,因此排除了UTI与肿瘤细胞结合可能参与体外预防肿瘤细胞侵袭的可能性。所有这些数据使我们得出结论,肿瘤细胞侵袭的抑制是由具有抗纤溶酶活性的结构域II介导的。