Growth regulated oncogene-α expression by murine squamous cell carcinoma promotes tumor growth, metastasis, leukocyte infiltration and angiogenesis by a host …

E Loukinova, G Dong, I Enamorado-Ayalya… - Oncogene, 2000 - nature.com
E Loukinova, G Dong, I Enamorado-Ayalya, GR Thomas, Z Chen, H Schreiber, C Van Waes
Oncogene, 2000nature.com
Abstract Growth Regulated Oncogene-α (GRO-α) is an autocrine growth factor in melanoma
and is a member of the CXC family of chemokines which promote chemotaxis of
granulocytes and endothelia through binding to CXC Receptor 2. We found previously that
variants of murine squamous cell carcinoma PAM 212 which grow and metastasize more
rapidly in vivo constitutively express increased levels of murine GRO-α, designated mGRO-
α, or KC. We have examined the possible role of mGRO-α expression in malignant …
Abstract
Growth Regulated Oncogene-α (GRO-α) is an autocrine growth factor in melanoma and is a member of the CXC family of chemokines which promote chemotaxis of granulocytes and endothelia through binding to CXC Receptor 2. We found previously that variants of murine squamous cell carcinoma PAM 212 which grow and metastasize more rapidly in vivo constitutively express increased levels of murine GRO-α, designated mGRO-α, or KC. We have examined the possible role of mGRO-α expression in malignant progression of squamous cell carcinoma PAM 212 in homologous BALB/c and BALB CXC Receptor-2 deficient mice. Transfection of the PAM 212 cell line which exhibits low expression of GRO-α and malignant potential with a pActin-KC vector encoding mGRO-α enabled isolation of PAM-KC expressing cell lines. These PAM-KC transfectants displayed an increased rate of growth and metastasis in BALB/c mice, similar to the highly malignant phenotype observed in spontaneously occurring metastatic variants. Furthermore, the PAM-KC tumors showed an increase in infiltration of host leukocytes and CD31+ blood vessels, consistent with increased CXC chemokine activity. The increased growth of PAM-KC cells was attenuated in CXCR-2 deficient mice, indicating that the increased growth was dependent in part upon host cells responsive to the CXC chemokine. Together, these results show that a CXC chemokine such as GRO-α can promote malignant growth of murine squamous cell carcinoma by a host CXCR-2 dependent pathway.
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