Effects of altering surface glycoprotein composition on metastatic colonisation potential of murine mammary tumour cells
- PMID: 3101727
- PMCID: PMC2001558
- DOI: 10.1038/bjc.1987.5
Effects of altering surface glycoprotein composition on metastatic colonisation potential of murine mammary tumour cells
Abstract
This study has examined cells from naturally-occurring murine mammary tumours to ascertain whether cell surface glycoproteins play a significant role in colonisation of the lungs after intravenous inoculation. It was found that gel electrophoretic analysis of membrane extracts and lectin adsorption studies did not reveal any consistent differences in glycoprotein composition of cells from tumours which can heavily colonise the lungs relative to ones from tumours which cannot do so or to cells from pulmonary metastases. Also, alteration of structural and functional properties of surface glycoproteins by treatment with succinylated lectins or with drugs such as tunicamycin and swainsonine, which inhibit glycosylation of membrane proteins, had no specific effects on metastatic colonisation of the lungs. Tunicamycin apparently decreased capability to form experimental metastases but also diminished tumourigenicity on subcutaneous inoculation, although it did not affect tumour cell viability in vitro. This information supports earlier studies from this laboratory involving enzymic digestion of the surface of living tumour cells before inoculation and demonstrates that the pulmonary colonisation capability of these mammary tumour cells can withstand global disorganisation of membrane glycoprotein structure and composition. This implies that either the surface glycoproteins are not important in the colonisation process, or that these tumour cells have great capability for rapid repair of their surfaces. It is concluded that a clear answer to whether surface glycoprotein composition has a decisive role in pulmonary colonisation by these mammary tumour cells requires introduction of stable heritable traits into tumour cell populations by genetic manipulation.
Similar articles
-
Experimental analysis of factors affecting metastatic spread using naturally occurring tumours.Invasion Metastasis. 1982;2(2):77-112. Invasion Metastasis. 1982. PMID: 7188393
-
Lectin agglutinability of mammary tumours with differing metastatic colonisation potentials.Differentiation. 1981;20(3):264-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1432-0436.1981.tb01182.x. Differentiation. 1981. PMID: 6896037
-
Effect of enzymic removal of cell surface constituents on metastatic colonisation potential of mouse mammary tumour cells.Br J Cancer. 1983 Oct;48(4):569-77. doi: 10.1038/bjc.1983.230. Br J Cancer. 1983. PMID: 6626455 Free PMC article.
-
Sequential alteration of peanut agglutinin binding-glycoprotein expression during progression of murine mammary neoplasia.Br J Cancer. 1992 May;65(5):641-8. doi: 10.1038/bjc.1992.138. Br J Cancer. 1992. PMID: 1586590 Free PMC article.
-
Branching N-linked oligosaccharides in breast cancer.Adv Exp Med Biol. 1994;353:95-104. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4615-2443-4_10. Adv Exp Med Biol. 1994. PMID: 7985545 Review.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical