Highly sensitive detection of invasive lung cancer cells by novel antibody against amino-terminal domain of laminin γ2 chain.

2016 
Summary The laminin γ2 chain, a subunit of laminin-332 (α3β3γ2), is a molecular marker for invasive cancer cells, but its pathological roles in tumor progression remain to be clarified. It was recently found that the most N-terminal, domain V (dV) of γ2 chain has activities to bind CD44 and stimulate tumor cell migration and vascular permeability. In the present study, we prepared a monoclonal antibody recognizing γ2 dV. Immunoblotting with this antibody, for the first time, showed that proteolytic fragments containing dV in a range of 15-80 kDa were highly produced in various human cancer cell lines and lung cancer tissues. In immunohistochemistry of adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas of the lung, this antibody immuno-stained the cytoplasm of invasive tumor cells and adjacent stroma much more strongly than a widely used antibody recognizing the C-terminal core part of the processed γ2 chain. This suggests that the dV fragments are highly accumulated in tumor cells and stroma compared to the processed γ2 protein. The strong tumor cell staining with the dV antibody correlated with the tumor malignancy grade. We also found that the laminin β3 chain was frequently overexpressed in tumor cells, while the α3 chain was in tumor stroma. The cytoplasmic dV detection was especially prominent in tumor cells infiltrating stroma but low in the cells surrounded by basement membranes, suggesting that the active tumor-stroma interaction is critical for the aberrant γ2 expression. The present study suggests important roles of laminin γ2 N-terminal fragments in tumor progression. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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