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1 Victorian Breast Cancer Research Consortium (VBCRC) Invasion and Metastasis Unit, St. Vincents Institute of Medical Research,
2 Department of Surgery, University of Melbourne, and
3 Bernard OBrien Institute for Microsurgery, St. Vincents Hospital, Melbourne, Australia;
4 Department of Surgery, The Catholic University of Korea, Our Lady of Mercy Hospital, Inchon, Korea;
5 Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kangnam St. Marys Hospital, The Catholic University of Korea Medical College, Seoul, Korea;
6 Lombardi Cancer Center, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC; and
7 Laboratory of Pathology, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland
The ability to activate pro-matrix metalloproteinase (pro-MMP)-2 via membrane type-MMP is a hallmark of human breast cancer cell lines that show increased invasiveness, suggesting that MMP-2 contributes to human breast cancer progression. To investigate this, we have stably transfected pro-MMP-2 into the human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231, which lacks MMP-2 expression but does express its cell surface activator, membrane type 1-MMP. Multiple clones were derived and shown to produce pro-MMP-2 and to activate it in response to concanavalin A. In vitro analysis showed that the pro-MMP-2-transfected clones exhibited an increased invasive potential in Boyden chamber and Matrigel outgrowth assays, compared with the parental cells or those transfected with vector only. When inoculated into the mammary fat pad of nude mice, each of the MMP-2-tranfected clones grew faster than each of the vector controls tested. After intracardiac inoculation into nude mice, pro-MMP-2-transfected clones showed a significant increase in the incidence of metastasis to brain, liver, bone, and kidney compared with the vector control clones but not lung. Increased tumor burden was seen in the primary site and in lung metastases, and a trend toward increased burden was seen in bone, however, no change was seen in brain, liver, or kidney. This data supports a role for MMP-2 in breast cancer progression, both in the growth of primary tumors and in their spread to distant organs. MMP-2 may be a useful target for breast cancer therapy when refinement of MMP inhibitors provides for MMP-specific agents.
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