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  • Title: Effect of changes in the CD44 gene on tumour cell invasion in gliomas.
    Author: Bouterfa H, Janka M, Meese E, Kerkau S, Roosen K, Tonn JC.
    Journal: Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol; 1997 Oct; 23(5):373-9. PubMed ID: 9364462.
    Abstract:
    Cell adhesion is a critical factor in the multistep process of tumour invasion. CD44 is one of the cell surface adhesion molecules responsible for interaction with hyaluronic acid, a component of the CNS extracellular matrix. The aim of the present study was to demonstrate whether alterations in the CD44 gene might account for different invasive behaviour. EcoRI restriction analysis by Southern blot hybridization revealed several additional hybridization signals in tissue specimens of two out of 16 patients with glioblastoma, indicating DNA rearrangements or point mutations, respectively, within the region of the CD44 gene. Expression patterns of CD44 isoforms in these two rearranged gliomas and in 28 other patients with malignant gliomas were analysed by RT-PCR. All cases displayed only the splice variant CD44H, which acts as hyaluronic acid receptor in glioma tumour cells. Tumour cell invasion was studied with Boyden chamber assays using hyaluronic acid as ligand and functional CD44H blocking antibody. Invasion of cells derived from those gliomas carrying the rearranged CD44 gene locus was decreased by about 50% compared with gliomas without rearrangement, indicating that the altered hybridization patterns in the two glioma samples influenced CD44H mediated glioma cell invasion through hyaluronic acid in vitro. Our results on CD44 isoform expression suggest that, in contrast to other solid tumours, gliomas seem to express only the CD44 variant. Genetic alterations within the CD44 gene might alter the binding domain of the receptor and thus account for different invasive behaviour in glioblastomas.
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