Abstract
Organ-specific adhesion molecules expressed by vascular endothelial cells have been implicated in the arrest of blood-borne cancer cells in selective, secondary sites. A lung-specific endothelial cell adhesion molecule (Lu-ECAM-1) localized on endothelia of distinct branches of lung blood vessels has been purified by immunoaffinity chromatography from detergent extracts of lung matrix-modulated endothelial cells using monoclonal antibody (mAb) 6D3. It has a molecular mass of 90 kDa and promotes the selective attachment of lung-metastatic B16 melanoma cells. Corresponding with their metastatic performance, B16-F10 tumor cells selected for high lung colonization bind to Lu-ECAM-1 in significantly higher numbers than their low lung metastatic counterpart B16-FO. Binding of B16-FO and B16-F10 is reduced with mAb 6D3 to slightly lower levels than B16-FO bound to Lu-ECAM-1. mAb 6D3 injected into C57BL/6 mice 1 hr prior to an i.v. challenge with B16-F10 causes a 90% reduction in the number of lung colonies compared with animals injected with control mAb (6D8 or 3C6). Lu-ECAM-1 neither binds nor effects metastasis of other lung-colonizing tumor cells (e.g., KLN205). Thus, site-specific metastasis of tumor cells is regulated by similar mechanisms as the homing of lymphocytes-namely, by the ability of blood-borne cancer cells to recognize and adhere to distinct endothelial cell adhesion molecules.
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Zhu, D., Cheng, C. F., & Pauli, B. U. (1991). Mediation of lung metastasis of murine melanomas by a lung-specific endothelial cell adhesion molecule. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 88(21), 9568–9572. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.21.9568
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