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Title: In vivo evidence of the role of alpha 4 beta 1-VCAM-1 interaction in sarcoma, but not in carcinoma extravasation. Author: Paavonen T, Tiisala S, Majuri ML, Böhling T, Renkonen R. Journal: Int J Cancer; 1994 Jul 15; 58(2):298-302. PubMed ID: 7517922. Abstract: Tumor-cell invasion can occur via either lymphatics or blood vessels. When in the blood circulation, tumor cells have to adhere to endothelium lining the blood vessels before they can extravasate. Several families of adhesion molecules have been recognized: selectins and their oligosaccharide-containing ligands and integrins and their counter-receptors belonging to the immunoglobulin superfamily. Besides their essential role in leukocyte extravasation, these adhesion molecules have been proposed by vitro experiments to be involved in tumor-cell invasion by facilitating the adhesion of malignant cells to endothelium leading to extravasation and metastasis. We have previously shown that, in vitro, several sarcoma cell lines adhere strongly to cultured endothelial cells via alpha 4 beta 1-VCAM-1 interaction. Here we show that sarcoma cells, especially in the metastatic lesions, were strongly alpha 4 beta 1 positive but did not express alpha 4 beta 7, which is another receptor for VCAM-I. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the capillary endothelium within metastatic sarcoma lesions reacted strongly with anti-VCAM-I antibody and very often the alpha 4 beta 1-expressing sarcoma cells were localized in the close vicinity of VCAM-I-expressing vessels. As control material we analyzed carcinoma specimens, but could not detect any alpha 4-integrin expression on malignant cells even though the endothelial cells were often VCAM-I positive. These results suggest that carcinomas do not use alpha 4 beta 1-VCAM-I in extravasation and, taken together, provide circumstantial evidence that in vitro findings of alpha 4 beta1-VCAM-I-dependent sarcoma cell adhesion to endothelium can be extended to in vivo situations.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]