Suppression of intracellular Cu‐Zn SOD results in enhanced motility and metastasis of Meth A sarcoma cells

1997 
We have previously described an inverse relationship between Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and invasiveness of a clone of human tongue cancer cells. In these cells, suppression of Cu-Zn SOD activity by transfection with anti-sense cDNA enhanced motility in vitro. The present studies were undertaken to determine whether the inverse relationship between intracellular Cu-Zn SOD activity and motility is a general property of other tumor cells and whether this enzyme indeed defines in vivo metastatic potential. Murine Meth A sarcoma-derived ML-01 cells, which have low metastatic activity, were transfected with anti-sense Cu-Zn SOD cDNA. Two clones with very different SOD activities-ML-AS2, with the most suppressed, and ML-AS5, with the least suppressed activity-were analyzed for their motility and metastatic capability. Compared to the mock-transfectant ML-neo, the metastatic potential and motility of the ML-AS2 and ML-AS5 were increased 4.5- and 2.1-fold respectively. Superoxide treatment enhanced the motility of the AS clones but not that of the ML-neo cells. Our results clearly show that there is an inverse relationship between the intracellular level of Cu-Zn SOD, cell motility and in vivo metastatic potential.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    22
    References
    37
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []