Publication | Open Access
Use of a reconstituted basement membrane to measure cell invasiveness and select for highly invasive tumor cells.
172
Citations
26
References
1986
Year
Biological MicroenvironmentsCellular PhysiologyTumor BiologyMatrix BiologyCell InvasivenessRadiation OncologyReconstituted Basement MembraneType Iv CollagenBasement MembranesInvasive Tumor CellsMembrane BiologyMembrane SystemCell ManipulationMalignant DiseaseCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentMalignant CellsCell-matrix InteractionCell MigrationMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Malignant cells must traverse basement membranes during their migration to sites distant from the primary tumor. Since basement membranes are thought to be a critical barrier to the passage of tumor cells, we have constructed a model basement membrane-stromal matrix consisting of laminin and type IV collagen reconstituted onto a disk of type I collagen for use in an in vitro assay of invasiveness. Metastatic tumor cells and leukocytes are able to cross this barrier, whereas nonmetastatic tumor cells, fibroblasts, and epidermal cells cannot penetrate it. Those tumor cells that penetrate the barriers were found, when isolated and subcultured, to be more invasive and to produce more metastases than the parental population. This assay system should be useful for studying the invasiveness of tumor cells and for isolating highly invasive variants.
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