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Activated K-ras is involved in regulation of integrin expression in human colon carcinoma cells

43

Citations

21

References

2000

Year

Abstract

Integrins participate in controlling proliferation and migration. Therefore, changes in integrin expression might be responsible for unrestrained proliferation and invasiveness of tumor cells. Alterations of integrin subunit expression have been observed in human colon carcinoma, especially loss or reduction of the alpha5 subunit, which was observed consistently. The mechanisms responsible for reduction of alpha5 expression and alteration of expression of other integrins are not fully understood. Circumstantial evidence from previous investigations points to an involvement of activated ras oncogenes in repression of integrin expression. The K-ras protooncogene is activated by point mutation in 50% of human colon carcinomas. Thus, we choose an antisense approach for specific inactivation of activated K-ras in the human colon carcinoma cell line SW 480 in order to test whether activated K-ras contributes to changes in integrin expression on colon carcinoma cells. Cell surface expression of the alpha1 and the alpha5 subunit was increased in K-ras antisense transfected clones, cell surface expression of the alpha3 subunit and the alphav subunit was decreased. This shows, in a human system, that activated K-ras is involved in diminishing cell surface expression of the alpha1beta1 collagen/laminin receptor and the alpha5beta1 fibronectin receptor, both of which are implicated in maintenance of a non-transformed phenotype. Moreover, activated K-ras contributes to increased cell surface expression of the alpha3beta1 laminin/collagen/fibronectin receptor and the alphavbeta5 vitronectin receptor, which might play a role in metastatic behavior of tumor cells.

References

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