Cytokine-dependent invasiveness in B16 murine melanoma cells: Role of uPA system and MMP-9
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- Published online on: March 1, 2006 https://doi.org/10.3892/or.15.3.709
- Pages: 709-714
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Abstract
Proteases are crucial for the spread of cancer cells from a primary tumor to the site of secondary growth. This study examined the ability of IFNγ and TNFα to stimulate a better invasiveness in B16 murine melanoma cells, and investigated whether this enhanced ability was related to a higher expression of protease activities, such as urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and its receptor (uPAR), and matrix metalloproteinases 2 and 9 (MMP-2, MMP-9). We found that murine melanoma cells enhanced their lung-colonizing potential in vivo and invasiveness through Matrigel-coated filters upon costimulation with IFNγ and TNFα; neither IFNγ nor TNFα alone, at the dose used in the experiments, was able to elicit a change in the invasive/metastatic efficiency of melanoma cells. The invasive phenotype of murine melanoma cells stimulated with IFNγ and TNFα was characterized by an enhanced uPA/uPAR and MMP-9 expression: TNFα promoted MMP-9 mRNA expression and pro-MMP-9 protein secretion, and the costimulation with IFNγ and TNFα was required to potentiate the expression of mRNA and protein for uPAR, and to induce a redistribution of uPA from the soluble to the cell body-associated form. Both monoclonal antibodies, anti-uPAR and anti-MMP-9, caused a significant reduction of invasiveness in IFNγ/TNFα-stimulated melanoma cells. These results indicate that invasiveness in B16 murine melanoma cells can be regulated in a cytokine-specific fashion and is dependent on the synergism between the uPA/uPAR system and MMP-9.