Rusciano D, Lorenzoni P, Burger M M
Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
Invasion Metastasis. 1993;13(4):212-24.
We investigated the respective roles of specific adhesion and paracrine growth stimulation in preferential liver colonization by an in vivo selected B16 murine melanoma cell line (B16-LS9). Comparison of B16-LS9 cells with a lung-specific B16 melanoma cell line (B16-F10) revealed no significant differences between their adhesion properties in vitro, or their immediate organ retention pattern in vivo after tail vein injection. In contrast, B16-LS9 cells grew at slower rates in vitro than B16-F10, unless hepatocytes in coculture, or a liver plasma membrane-extract, were present. In vivo, tumors produced by B16-LS9 cells after subcutaneous or intrafootpad injection also grew at slower rates than those produced by B16-F10, and appeared to progressively lose their liver specificity. However, after intravenous (tail vein) or intrasplenic inoculation, liver colonization was much more pronounced with B16-LS9 than B16-F10 cells. These data indicate that liver colonization by the B16-LS9 cell line depends primarily on the inability of these cells to grow efficiently at sites other than the liver. The liver can indeed provide these cells with a growth-stimulating factor which we found associated with its plasma membrane fraction (i.e. juxtacrine growth stimulation).