Alternatively spliced variants of the cell adhesion molecule CD44 and tumour progression in colorectal cancer

DC Gotley, J Fawcett, MD Walsh, JA Reeder… - British journal of …, 1996 - nature.com
DC Gotley, J Fawcett, MD Walsh, JA Reeder, DL Simmons, TM Antalis
British journal of cancer, 1996nature.com
Increased expression of alternatively spliced variants of the CD44 family of cell adhesion
molecules has been associated with tumour metastasis. In the present study, expression of
alternatively spliced variants of CD44 and their cellular distribution have been investigated
in human colonic tumours and in the corresponding normal mucosa, in addition to benign
adenomatous polyps. The expression of CD44 alternatively spliced variants has been
correlated with tumour progression according to Dukes' histological stage. CD44 variant …
Abstract
Increased expression of alternatively spliced variants of the CD44 family of cell adhesion molecules has been associated with tumour metastasis. In the present study, expression of alternatively spliced variants of CD44 and their cellular distribution have been investigated in human colonic tumours and in the corresponding normal mucosa, in addition to benign adenomatous polyps. The expression of CD44 alternatively spliced variants has been correlated with tumour progression according to Dukes' histological stage. CD44 variant expression was determined by immunohistochemisty using monoclonal antibodies directed against specific CD44 variant domains together with RT-PCR analysis of CD44 variant mRNA expression in the same tissue specimens. We demonstrate that as well as being expressed in colonic tumour cells, the full range of CD44 variants, CD44v2-v10, are widely expressed in normal colonic crypt epithelium, predominantly in the crypt base. CD44v6, the epitope which is most commonly associated with tumour progression and metastasis, was not only expressed by many benign colonic tumours, but was expressed as frequently in normal basal crypt epithelium as in malignant colonic tumour cells, and surprisingly, was even absent from some metastatic colorectal tumours. Expression of none of the CD44 variant epitopes was found to be positively correlated with tumour progression or with colorectal tumour metastasis to the liver, results which are inconsistent with a role for CD44 variants as indicators of colonic cancer progression.
nature.com