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Clinical Investigations |
Laboratories of Molecular Carcinogenesis [D. P. L, C. C., P. W. L., J. C. B.] and Experimental Pathology [J. F. F.], National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709; Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599 [D. P. L.]; and Nuffield Department of Pathology and Bacteriology, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford OX3 9DU, United Kingdom [J. G.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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129,400 new cases (2)
. The majority of colorectal cancers arise from a series of somatic genetic changes (3)
that involve activation of ras oncogenes and inactivation of tumor suppressor genes on chromosomes 5q (APC4
), 17p (p53), and 18q [uncertain gene(s)]. The delineation of the molecular genetic and biological changes that accompany the pathogenesis of colorectal cancer will hopefully improve patient outcome in the future. Unfortunately, the overwhelming majority of the 56,600 patients (2)
estimated to die with colorectal cancer this year will die from metastatic disease (4)
. Unlike the molecular events described for the pathogenesis of primary colon carcinomas (3)
, the genes responsible for metastasis in these tumors have not been well characterized. The 5-year survival of stage IV colorectal cancer is <5% and has not changed in 50 years (4)
. However, because treatment of patients with 5-fluorouracil-based chemotherapy in stage III disease (that has spread to local-regional lymph nodes) improves survival (5)
, the identification of markers for potential metastatic disease in stages III that predict subsequent metastasis and poor outcome is crucial. These patients could be enrolled into clinical trials designed to ask whether adjuvant chemotherapy after surgery could improve survival. Several candidate antimetastasis or anti-invasion genes have been studied in colorectal carcinoma, including nm23 (6) , E-cadherin (7 , 8) , CD44 (9 , 10) , and others, but no consistent findings have been reported. For example, in separate studies, nm23 expression has been found to directly correlate (11) , not to correlate (12 , 13) , or inversely correlate (14 , 15) with metastatic potential in colorectal cancer.
KAI1 was originally isolated as a gene that suppressed metastasis of rat prostate tumor cells to the lungs in an experimental metastasis assay (16) . The isolation of this gene had its origin in the observation that the fusion of a tumorigenic, nonmetastatic cell to a tumorigenic, metastatic cell resulted in a somatic cell hybrid that was nonmetastatic (17 , 18) . This finding supported the view that metastasis is a recessive phenotype, and that genes in the nonmetastatic cell complement the loss of genes in the metastatic cell. Human chromosome 11 introduced by microcell-mediated chromosome transfer into a highly metastatic rat prostate cancer cell line suppressed lung metastases in a murine experimental metastasis model (19) . KAI1 was positionally cloned at chromosome 11p11.2 and was also shown to suppress metastasis (16) .
KAI1 is a member of the TM4SF, many of which, including KAI1, are CD antigens present on the surface of leukocytes (20) . At least three TM4SF members are implicated in metastasis, including CD9/MRP-1 (21) , CD63/ME491 (22) , and CD82/KAI1 (16) . KAI1 mRNA is ubiquitously expressed, with abundant expression on the surface epithelium of the major epithelial tissues, including lung, breast, prostate, and gastrointestinal tract (23 , 24) . KAI1 and other TM4SF members have been demonstrated to bind to each other (20) , integrins (25 , 26) , and E-cadherin (27) . Recently, KAI1 has been shown to suppress invasion and motility and enhance homotypic cell adhesion in human colon cancer cell lines (28) .Therefore, KAI1 may associate with other TM4SF members, integrins, E-cadherin, and other surface molecules to relay extracellular signals to signal transduction pathways that are important in cellular adhesion, invasion, motility, and metastasis suppression.
In this study, we hypothesized that KAI1 protein expression would be down-regulated in the progression of colorectal cancer. We analyzed 20 tumor cell lines and 84 patient samples that represented all four stages of disease. We also examined a subset of 12 stage IV patients that had procured samples from normal adjacent colonic mucosae, primary colorectal tumors, and metastatic lesions in the liver to assess KAI1 expression in the progression to metastatic disease.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Immunoblot Analysis.
The Western blot protocol was based on methods reported previously (29)
. Cell monolayers were washed twice in cold PBS. Five ml of cold PBS were then added to the monolayer, and the cells were scraped into a 15-ml conical tube (Sarstedt, Inc., Newton, NC). The cells were centrifuged at 4°C for 5 min at 1200 rpm. The supernatant was aspirated, and the pellet was gently vortexed to briefly disperse the cells. Cell proteins were solubilized in 150400 µl of lysis buffer [10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 150 mM NaCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 0.5% NP40, and 2 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride) for 10 min on ice. The lysates were then centrifuged at 14,000 rpm at 4°C for 10 min. The supernatant was removed, and the protein concentration was determined by the Bradford method (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA). An equal volume of Laemmlis sample buffer without 2-mercaptoethanol was added to the soluble protein and boiled for 5 min. Twenty µg of cellular protein were size fractionated by 17.5% SDS-PAGE, transferred to Immobilon-P membrane (Millipore Corporation, Bedford, MA), and incubated with KAI1 C33 hybridoma supernatant (1:100 dilution; a kind gift from Dr. Osamu Yoshie, Shionogi Institute for Medical Science, Osaka, Japan). Bound antibody was measured by the ECL Western blotting analysis system (Amersham Life Sciences, Buckinghamshire, England).
To ensure equal loading of protein, actin control experiments were performed as above, with the following modifications. Solubilized proteins were mixed with an equal volume of Laemmlis sample buffer supplemented with 10 mM DTT. The proteins were separated on a 10% SDS-PAGE gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and incubated with an antihuman actin monoclonal antibody (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO).
We compared the relative amount of KAI1 protein expression on Western blots by densitometry (Personal Densitometer SI; Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). For each cell line, the density of the KAI1 band was divided by the density of the actin band. NCI-H716 had the lowest quotient (0.0085), and therefore all other cell line quotients were divided by 0.0085 for normalization to NCI-H716.
Patient Samples.
The patient samples were obtained from Dr. Stanley R. Hamilton (The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD), who procured the specimens from 1985 to 1995. "Normal" colonic mucosae adjacent to the primary colon tumor, primary tumors, and liver metastases were immediately snap frozen after surgical resection. Tissue procurement was approved by the Joint Committee on Clinical Investigation and the Institutional Review Board.
Immunohistochemistry.
Frozen human colon tissue was sectioned and fixed in Rapid Fixx (Shandon-Lipshaw, Pittsburgh, PA) for 7 s at room temperature. Active ingredients in Rapid Fixx include methanol (75%), formaldehyde (20%), and glacial acetic acid (5%). The slides were immersed in 1x AB (Biomeda, Foster City, CA) until all sections were cut. After the last section was cut, the slides remained in buffer for 5 min and were washed again in another 5-min 1x AB wash. Endogenous peroxidases were blocked by incubating with 0.3% H2O2 for 30 min at room temperature. The sections were subsequently blocked with 5% normal horse serum (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for 20 min at room temperature.
Endogenous avidin and biotin was blocked by tandem 15-min incubations, with the samples washed with 1x AB between reactions. All incubations were carried out in a humidified chamber for 30 min (excluding the primary antibody) at room temperature using an indirect IHC staining procedure (30) . Localization of KAI1 protein expression was investigated using a monoclonal antibody against KAI1 (C33; a kind gift from Dr. Yoshie). The KAI1 and normal mouse serum antibodies were diluted with 1% BSA (Sigma) in 1x AB. KAI1 staining was completed using a mouse IgG kit containing the block, as well as secondary and label antibodies, according to the manufacturers instructions (Vectastain Mouse IgG ABC Elite kit; Vector Laboratories). Mouse anti-KAI1 antibody was applied at a dilution of 1:100 for 1 h. Normal mouse serum, at the same concentration of the primary antibody, was used as the negative control in place of KAI1. Visualization of the antibody complex was completed using a 10-mg diaminobenzidine tablet (Sigma) dissolved in 20 ml of 1x AB, containing 12 ml of 30% H2O2 for 6 min in the dark. Slides were then rinsed in running tap water, counterstained with Harris hematoxylin (Harelco, Gibbstown, NJ), dehydrated through a series of graded alcohols to xylene, and coverslipped with Permount (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA).
The slides were scored for KAI1 protein expression by D. P. L. and J. G., who were blinded to the clinical and pathological stage of the patients. We determined the KAI1 score by estimating the percentage of cells that had membrane staining for KAI1 and multiplying by the assessment of the intensity of the stain on a 1+, 2+, or 3+ scale. The theoretical limits of the scores ranged from 0 (0% of cells staining) to 300 (100% of the cells staining at 3+ intensity).
Statistical Analysis.
SAS JMP software (version 3.2.2, 1997) was used to perform the calculations (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC). For all analyses, the Shapiro-Wilk W test was performed to examine whether the data were normally distributed. The comparison of relative KAI1 expression of the MMR-deficient and wild-type cell lines was determined by the Wilcoxon rank-sum test, and allowing the SDs to be unequal, was adjusted with the Welch ANOVA test. Students t test was used to compare the KMS of the normal colonic mucosa and the tumors of the 84 patients. To compare the KMS of the normal mucosa, tumor, and differences between the normal and tumor, we used the Wilcoxon rank-sum, the Welch ANOVA, and the Bonferroni t procedures. We made six comparisons between stages I through IV and therefore set
= 0.05/6 = 0.0083. We analyzed the question of whether the tumor stage was associated with increasing KMS by the Wilcoxon rank-sum and the Welch ANOVA tests. Each of the 84 patients had a normal adjacent colonic mucosa sample as a matched control tissue to the tumor sample. The difference between the KMS of the normal mucosa and the tumor was calculated and declared to be significant if it was different from 0. In the normal-adenoma-carcinoma sequence, we set the
= 0.05/3 comparisons = 0.0167 and used the Tukey HSD procedure.
| RESULTS |
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The structure of KAI1 suggests a role in cellular adhesion (16)
; therefore, we compared protein expression in a pair of cell lines that differ in their adhesion properties (Fig. 1B
, Lanes 5 and 6). The SNU-C2A and SNU-C2B cell lines were established from the same patient, but the former grows as floating aggregates in serum-free medium, whereas the latter grows as an adherent monolayer in serum-containing medium in cell culture. Although the KAI1 expression is comparatively similar in both lines, the glycosylation pattern of SNU-C2A contains higher molecular weight species of KAI1 protein relative to that of SNU-C2B.
The metastatic cecum cell lines differed in their levels of KAI1 expression. NCI-H716, a 5-fluorouracil-resistant cell line isolated from ascites, expressed a low level of KAI1 and grew as floating aggregates in suspension (Fig. 1B
, Lane 7; Table 1
). NCI-H747 is an adherent cell line isolated from a patient with a metastatic common bile duct lymph node and expressed a moderate amount of KAI1 (Fig. 1B
, Lane 8; Table 1
). The rectal carcinoma cell lines SW837 and SW1463 are both high-grade tumors and expressed abundant levels of KAI1 (Fig. 1B
, Lanes 9 and 10; Table 1
).
Low KAI1 Expression Is Associated with MMR Status in Several Colorectal Cancer Cell Lines.
Several key genes are lost or mutated in the progression of colorectal cancer; therefore, we next compared KAI1 expression with the genotype of the APC, p53, and DNA MMR genes (Table 1)
. APC mutations are common events in these cell lines, but no relationship was found between KAI1 expression and APC mutations. APC mutations exist in DLD-1 (31)
, HT-29 (32)
, SW480 (33)
, SW620 (34)
, and LoVo (35
, 36)
, but KAI1 protein expression varied considerably in these cell lines (Table 1
; Fig. 1
). SW48, RKO, HCT116 (31
, 37)
, and LS174T (34)
are all wild type for APC but express low amounts of KAI1.
Recently, investigators discovered a putative p53 binding site within the promoter region of KAI1 and suggested that p53 directly activates the expression of KAI1 (38)
. We found no relationship between KAI1 expression and p53 mutation status in our colorectal cancer cell lines. For example, SW48, RKO, HCT 116, LS174T (39)
, and LoVo (36)
are wild type for p53 but expressed little KAI1 protein. Mutant p53 cell lines were associated with both high KAI1 expression (HT-29, WiDr (39
, 40)
, SW480 (39
, 41)
, SW1116, SW837 (39)
, and low KAI1 expression [DLD-1 (39)
and SW620 (39)
; Table 1
].
However, we did observe a correlation between loss of KAI1 expression and the presence of MMR mutations. In the MMR-deficient (MMR-) or replicative error-positive cell lines DLD-1 (42) , HCT-15 (43) , SW48 (44) , RKO, HCT116 (43) , LS180, LS174T, and LoVo (44 , 45) , KAI1 expression was low (median relative KAI1 expression, 19). In contrast, in the MMR wild-type cell lines HT29, SW480, SW1116, SW837, and SW1463, KAI1 was highly expressed (median relative KAI1 expression, 587; P = 0.003; Wilcoxon rank-sum; Welch ANOVA testing means equal, allowing SDs unequal: P = 0.04).
KAI1 Is Down-Regulated in the Progression of Stage IV Colorectal Cancer Patients.
Because we found that KAI1 expression is lower in the metastatic SW620 compared with that in the primary SW480 cell line, we next asked whether KAI1 was decreased in the progression to metastatic disease in colorectal cancer patients. In Fig. 2
, we show KAI1 IHC in one representative patient with stage IV disease in which we have samples from the "normal" adjacent colonic mucosa, primary colon tumor, and colon metastasis in the liver. KAI1 was strongly expressed in the normal colonic epithelium (Fig. 2A)
, lymphoid aggregates, and tissue macrophages (Fig. 3B)
. Because KAI1 is expressed in activated B and T lymphocytes and macrophages (46
, 47)
, its expression in lymph nodes and tissue macrophages was used as an internal positive control in the patient samples. Normal mouse serum was substituted for the C33 KAI1 antibody in the protocol to serve as a negative control (Fig. 2B)
. Although KAI1 was strongly expressed in the normal mucosa, it was expressed heterogeneously in the primary tumor (Fig. 2, CE)
, with both KAI1-positive (Fig. 2D)
and KAI1-negative (Fig. 2E)
portions of the tumor. In sections from the colon tumor metastasis in the liver, the hepatocytes and sinusoids were KAI1 positive, but the tumor KAI1 expression was clearly down-regulated (Fig. 2F)
. In the majority of the metastatic tumor, KAI1 expression was absent (Fig. 2G)
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KAI1 Expression Is Reduced in Early and Late Stage Colorectal Cancer.
Having demonstrated that KAI1 is down-regulated in the progression of colorectal cancer in stage IV patients, we next analyzed 84 patients from stages I to IV to determine whether the down-regulation was related to stage progression and metastatic potential (Table 3
; Fig. 4
). Essentially all of the patient samples had lower KAI1 expression in the primary tumor compared with the normal colon (82 of 84; 98%). The only two cases that did not show a difference between the normal and the tumor scores were two stage I patients. These two patients account for the high end of the range of scores in stage I tumor scores (Fig. 4)
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In Table 3
and Fig. 4
, we note that there is an apparent trend for the normal KAI1 scores to decrease, as the stage increased from I to IV (P = 0.0052, Wilcoxon rank sum; Welch ANOVA testing means equal, allowing SDs unequal: P = 0.006). However, only stage I was statistically different from stage IV (Bonferroni t test, P < 0.0083). We did not observe an inverse relationship between increased tumor stage and decreased tumor mean KAI1 score (P = 0.16, Wilcoxon rank sum test; Welch ANOVA testing means equal, allowing SDs not equal: P = 0.13).
The use of normal controls allowed us to calculate the differences between the scores of the normal mucosae and the tumors for each patient. Although we found that the differences were significant for each stage (P < 0.0083), we did not observe increased differences as a function of increasing stage (for
= 0.05/6 = 0.0083; P = 0.07, Wilcoxon rank sum; Welch ANOVA, P = 0.05; both not significant).
Reduced KAI1 Expression in the Normal Colonic Epithelium-Adenoma-Carcinoma Sequence.
We had originally hypothesized that the loss of KAI1 expression would be related to increasing stage. With evidence that loss of KAI1 expression occurred in stage I patient samples, we then asked whether KAI1 was down-regulated in precursor lesions (adenomas). In 10 of 84 colorectal carcinoma specimens, we noted the presence of adenomas admixed with the primary tumors. The "normal" colonic epithelium, adenoma, and carcinoma varied in degree of KAI1 immunostain as shown in Fig. 3
for one representative patient. The normal colonic epithelium stained strongly in nearly all cells (Fig. 3B)
, but the adenoma had heterogeneous staining with some KAI1 protein loss (Fig. 3C)
, whereas the carcinoma was absent for KAI1 expression (Fig. 3D)
. We determined the KAI1 IHC scores in the 10 patients and found that KAI1 expression was decreased in the progression from normal colon to adenoma to carcinoma (Table 4)
.
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| DISCUSSION |
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We found that KAI1 expression is decreased at several points along the progression of colorectal cancer. In all 10 cases in which adenomas were associated with carcinomas, KAI1 was abundantly expressed in the normal colonic epithelium but was down-regulated in the adenomas and further down-regulated in the carcinomas (Fig. 3
; Table 4
). E-cadherin, located at intercellular adherens junctions and involved in homotypic adhesion and the suppression of tumor invasion, was also demonstrated to have reduced expression in the transition from colorectal adenoma to carcinoma (57)
. Furthermore, loss of E-cadherin expression was associated with increased degree of dysplasia in adenomas. Because KAI1 and E-cadherin physically interact (27)
, the down-regulation of KAI1/E-cadherin/catenin complex may be important in the progression of colorectal cancer. We recently observed loss of KAI1 protein expression in a subset of high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions of the cervix (58)
. Therefore, the loss of cell adhesion molecules, such as E-cadherin and KAI1, may occur in the progression from normal epithelium to premalignant lesion to carcinoma in a variety of malignant diseases.
However, the down-regulation of KAI1 is not limited to only the early stages of progression. In this study, the 12 cases with hepatic metastases had a median KAI1 score of 7.0, whereas five cases had no KAI1 staining in the colon metastases to the liver (Fig. 4)
. Therefore, although most of the KAI1 loss of expression seems to occur early in colorectal cancer progression, further down-regulation of KAI1 and/or selection of low or absent KAI1 expresser colon carcinoma cells occurs along the progression of colorectal cancer to liver metastases (Tables 2
3
4)
.
We observed that KAI1 protein expression in normal colonic mucosa adjacent to the tumor was less in stage IV than in stage I colorectal cancer. We speculate that the low KAI1 expression may be the result of paracrine factors produced by the tumor that not only decrease KAI1 expression in the tumor but also act on nonmalignant mucosa to down-regulate KAI1 expression. This concept will need to be tested in controlled experiments.
The membrane localization of KAI1, as well as its extensive glycosylation, suggests a role in cellular adhesion. In transfection studies, KAI1 enhanced the calcium-independent aggregation of colon carcinoma cell lines in vitro (28)
. We studied the nonadherent SNU-C2A and the adherent SNU-C2B by Western blot to compare KAI1 protein levels and glycosylation patterns (Table 1
; Fig. 1B
, Lanes 5 and 6). We found that although the protein levels were comparable, the glycosylation pattern of SNU-C2A had higher molecular weight species than that of SNU-C2B. Structural changes in oligosaccharide side chains of glycoproteins are associated with the progression toward invasive and metastatic phenotypes in tumors (59)
. In a study of colorectal carcinoma patients,
1,6-branched oligosaccharides were associated with lymph node status and was an independent prognostic indicator for tumor recurrence and overall survival (60)
. The tumor cell lines had more complex glycosylation patterns (Fig. 1)
relative to that of normal colon tissue (Fig. 1A
, Lane 1), and we speculate that these changes may be important in tumor development and metastasis. KAI1 protein expression was down-regulated 15-fold in the metastatic cell line SW620, compared with that of the primary SW480 cell line (Fig. 1B)
. Furthermore, the highly variable glycosylation pattern of SW480 contrasts dramatically with the focused glycosylated bands of Mr
46,000 in SW620. Recently, a study with a Chinese hamster ovary mutant cell line 1d1D deficient in UDP-Glc 4-epimerase that was transfected with either KAI1 or CD9 and grown in the presence of galactose supplemented medium was shown to inhibit cellular motility and cause massive cell death after a latent period (61)
. Additional work is necessary to clarify the role of posttranslational modifications, such as glycosylation, of KAI1 in tumor cells.
In the colorectal cancer cell lines studied, we noted a correlation between low KAI1 protein expression and the replicative error or MMR-deficient phenotype (Table 1)
. The functional significance for the association is not immediately apparent, because KAI1 is not commonly mutated in prostate cancer (49)
. The mutation frequency of KAI1 is not known in colorectal cancer. The patient database presented in this study has not been characterized for MMR status at this time. To ask whether MMR genes directly regulate KAI1 expression, we are studying KAI1 expression in several cell lines that contain wild-type MMR genes by either chromosome transfer or transfection studies.
Mashimo et al. (38)
recently found a putative p53 consensus-binding site within the promoter region of KAI1 and demonstrated that p53 directly activated KAI1 expression in prostate carcinoma cells. In 177 prostate cancer patients, they observed a direct correlation between p53 and KAI1 expression in formaldehyde-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections. Unfortunately, the KAI1 antibody that was used in their study has no immunoreactivity for KAI1 protein in our hands.5
Also, the detection of KAI1 protein by IHC in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections is much less sensitive than that observed in frozen tissues. We have recently improved the detection in archival tissues using the C33 mAb in squamous and lymphoid neoplasms (58)
, but to our knowledge no progress has been made in prostate cancer. We did not observe a relationship between p53 status and KAI1 protein expression in the colorectal cancer cell lines studied (Table 1)
. Wild-type p53 cell lines SW48, RKO, HCT116, LS174T, and LoVo are all low KAI1 expressers. Mutant p53 cell lines demonstrated both high and low KAI1 expression.
The potential shortcomings of this work include the difficulty of quantifying KAI1 protein expression by IHC and the lack of survival data in the patient group. IHC is the preferred method for detecting KAI1 because the gene is expressed in stromal elements such as lymphoid follicles, fibroblasts, and tissue macrophages. We tried to be quantitative by calculating the KAI1 scores by multiplying the percentage of cells stained by the intensity of the stain. Although these two measurements are subjective, the two scorers were blinded to the clinical and pathological characteristics of the samples. Given the subjective nature of IHC scoring, we included normal colon epithelium as a control tissue for each patient, thereby having a reference with which the KAI1 tumor scores could be compared. The patient database is not mature enough to provide survival information, but we do not anticipate that KAI1 expression will have prognostic significance, because it is lost to the same degree in all four stages of colorectal cancer in the patient population studied.
In conclusion, we found that the progression of colorectal cancer, from the nonmalignant, "normal" adjacent colonic epithelium, to the premalignant adenoma, to the primary tumor, to the liver metastasis was associated with the progressive loss of KAI1 protein expression. The loss of KAI1 expression was not correlated with higher stage, a surrogate marker for metastatic potential. The down-regulation of KAI1 that is observed in "normal" colonic mucosa adjacent to the primary tumors in stage IV disease and in adenomas demonstrates that loss of KAI1 expression occurs earlier in cancer progression than understood previously. The selection of cells that have the ability to spread from the primary tumor to the liver metastasis may favor those cells that have lost KAI1 expression. Those cells would be expected to be less adhesive, more invasive, and more motile (28) , three characteristics that are necessary for metastasis.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 This work was supported by Grant 3 M01 RR00046-38S2 from the NIH (to D. P. L.). ![]()
2 Present address: Division of Hematology/Oncology, Department of Medicine, and Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75235-8593. ![]()
3 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, P. O. Box 12233, MD C2-15, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-2233. Phone: (919) 541-2992; Fax: (919) 541-7784; E-mail: barrett{at}niehs.nih.gov ![]()
4 The abbreviations used are: APC, adenomatous polyposis coli; TM4SF, transmembrane 4 superfamily; NIEHS, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; AB, Automation Buffer; CD, cluster of differentiation; mAb, monoclonal antibody; IHC, immunohistochemistry; MMR, mismatch repair. ![]()
5 D. P. Lombardi, J. F. Foley, J. T. Isaacs, and J. C. Barrett, unpublished data. ![]()
Received 6/ 9/99. Accepted 9/22/99.
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