4.3 Article

Functional blocking of specific integrins inhibit colonic cancer migration

Journal

CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 769-780

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10585-009-9276-5

Keywords

Colonic cancer; Migration; Extravasation; Early liver metastasis development; Intravital microscopy

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Funding

  1. Aileen Lynn Bequest Fund

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For more effective oncological management of disseminated colorectal cancer, therapies must be devised that target the different individual stages of metastasis development. Recent work showed that integrin subunits alpha 2, alpha 6 and beta 4 are involved in the colorectal cancer cell extravasation process. By means of Immunocytochemistry and Western blotting, it was shown that all three integrins are expressed not only in human colorectal cancer cells (HT29) but also in rat colonic cancer cells (DHDK12). Using in vivo models and intravital video microscopy techniques, it was shown that functional blocking of these integrin subunits by specific antibodies produced a significant reduction in cancer cell extravasation and migration. In conclusion, integrin subunits alpha 2, alpha 6 and beta 4 are expressed in unrelated colorectal cancer cell strains and appear to play a key role in cancer cell migration.

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