PMID: 9533763Apr 9, 1998Paper

Integrin alpha3beta1-mediated interaction with laminin-5 stimulates adhesion, migration and invasion of malignant glioma cells

International Journal of Cancer. Journal International Du Cancer
Y FukushimaKiyotoshi Sekiguchi

Abstract

Gliomas, characterized by their progressively invasive phenotype, express integrin alpha3beta1 as a major receptor for the extracellular matrix both in vivo and in vitro. Since the integrin alpha3beta1 has been shown to be a specific receptor for laminin-5 (alpha3beta3gamma2), we examined the effects of purified human laminin-5 on adhesion, migration and invasion of human glioma cells. Among different types of laminin variants and other matrix proteins including fibronectin and vitronectin, laminin-5 was most potent in promoting adhesion and migration of different kinds of glioma cells. Laminin-5-mediated adhesion and migration were specifically inhibited by monoclonal antibodies against integrin alpha3 and beta1 chains, confirming the role of integrin alpha3beta1 as the major laminin-5 receptor. Invasion of the reconstituted basement membrane (i.e., Matrigel) by glioma cells was also selectively stimulated by laminin-5. Out results show that laminin-5 is the major extracellular stimulant for glioma cell adhesion, migration and invasion. The immunohistochemical distribution of laminin gamma2 chain, a laminin subunit unique to laminin-5, showed that it was expressed in the tumor parenchyma of human glioma tissues. Expression of ...Continue Reading

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