Publication | Closed Access
The role of Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen in adhesion of human breast and prostate cancer cells to the endothelium.
239
Citations
37
References
2001
Year
Cell AdhesionImmunologyGlycobiologyProstate Cancer CellsCancer MetastasisImmunotherapyCancer BiologyTumor BiologyHuman BreastCancer Cell BiologyT Antigen-masking InhibitorsMatrix BiologyThomsen-friedenreich AntigenCancer ResearchGlycosylationTumor TargetingCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentBiomolecular EngineeringEndocrine-related CancerDrug TargetingCell-matrix InteractionMedicineCarbohydrate-protein Interaction
Interactions of metastatic cancer cells with vasculatory endothelium are critical during early stages of cancer metastasis. Understanding the molecular underpinnings of these interactions is essential for the development of new efficacious cancer therapies. Here we demonstrate that cancer-associated carbohydrate T antigen plays a leading role in docking breast and prostate cancer cells onto endothelium by specifically interacting with endothelium-expressed beta-galactoside-binding protein, galectin-3. Importantly, T antigen-bearing glycoproteins are also capable of mobilizing galectin-3 to the surface of endothelial cells, thus priming them for harboring metastatic cancer cells. The T antigen-mediated, tumor-endothelial cell interactions could be efficiently disrupted using synthetic compounds either mimicking or masking this carbohydrate structure. High efficiency of T antigen-mimicking and T antigen-masking inhibitors of tumor cell adhesion warrants their further development into antiadhesive cancer therapeutics.
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