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. 2003 Oct;75(2):124-30.
doi: 10.1016/s0014-4800(03)00053-4.

Motility of colon cancer cells: modulation by CD44 isoform expression

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Motility of colon cancer cells: modulation by CD44 isoform expression

Karrie Wong et al. Exp Mol Pathol. 2003 Oct.

Abstract

The invasion of cancer cells at primary tumor sites and their migration during metastatic spread require the expression of cell adhesion and motility proteins. Whether accelerated cell motility is necessary in these two processes is not universally accepted. In this study we took advantage that CD44, a cell adhesion protein, has different metastatic potentials depending on its splicing isoforms to examine how they affect cell motility. We established stable transfectants of standard and variant isoforms of CD44 in SW620 cells, a human colon carcinoma cell line that does not express CD44. The morphology of the cells varied according to the CD44 isoform expressed, but actin filament distribution remained unchanged. Using the wound assay in a two-dimensional in vitro cell motility system, we found that the expression of standard CD44 increases cell motility, whereas CD44 isoforms containing an exon sequence associated with metastatic dissemination has a slowing effect. Cell proliferation was also decreased by the expression of variant CD44 isoforms. Overall, colon cancer cells expressing variant CD44 isoforms had slower cell motility, possibly due to alterations in their cell adhesion properties. In conclusion, this study suggests that, contrary to common models, the metastatic phenotype is associated with a slow rate of cell migration when tested in vitro.

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