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Monoclonal Antibody Testing for Cancer MetastasisMalignant cells are characterized by the ability to invade surrounding normal tissues. Tumor invasion is abetted by proteolytic enzymes that have been correlated with recurrent disease and metastasis. These enzymes are involved in a cascade of proteolytic interactions with other enzymes and inhibitors which allow cancer cells to dissolve surrounding extracellular matrix, thereby enabling the cells to rapidly invade adjacent tissues and migrate to metastatic sites distant from the primary tumor. Among these proteases are the plasminogen activators (PA), collagenase IV, faminase, and in some cases cathepsin D, which together mediate key steps in the invasion process of metastasis. Cells which have the selective advantage for invasion and metastasis are those capable of regulating their proteolytic activity and proliferation. Cells in the process of invasion would be probably down-regulated for proliferation, but subsequent to attachment and adhesion at a distant site, would then be in a proliferative mode, up-regulating DNA replication. Urokinase (uPA) can be present in the tissues in several molecular forms. The inactive proenzyme is a single chain protein (scuPA) that is cleaved at Lys. 158 to form the double chain, high molecular weight active form (HMW-uPA) of 54 kD. A low molecular weight form (LMW-uPA) can also be produced by cleavage of the HMW-U PA at Lys. 135 - Lys. 136 giving a 35 kD active enzyme. Recently, it has been shown that the HMW active form of urokinase, bound to the tumor cell membrane, is responsible for the local lysis of the extracellular matrix, hence the tissue invasion mechanism for metastasis (Andreasen et al, 19861. Receptor- (membrane) bound uPA is twice as efficient (catalytically) as free fluid-phase uPA. Tho unbound uPA and the LMW form is not responsible for most of the local dissolution of extracellular matrix in the immediate vicinity of the metastatic tumor cell. High levels of urokinase (greater than 3.49 ng/mg of total protein) extracted from breast tumor tissues have recently been shown, together with plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), to be a good prognostic indicator for high risk of recurrence and shorter patient survival times. In this project, we have attempted to develop immunocytochemical methodologies for the clinical assessment of the expression of urokinase plasminogen activator, which has been implicated to be important for initial steps in tumor invasion, and to relate it to cell proliferation and DNA replication at the single-cell level.
Document ID
19970013330
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 1993
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:203949
NASA-CR-203949
Report Number: NAS 1.26:203949
Report Number: NASA-CR-203949
Accession Number
97N17236
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS9-18189
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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