Abstract

Transfection of murine metastatic B78H1 cells (derived from B16 melanoma) with a syngeneic H-2Kb gene was used to study the effect of Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) gene products on tumour cell adhesion to endothelial cells and matrix proteins and the involvement in the metastatic process. H-2Kb-expressing transfectants showed a reduced adhesion to endothelial surfaces of different origin (four murine endotheliomas and human umbilical vein endothelial cells) when compared to parental B78H1 cells and to controls transfected with pSV2neo alone. On the average a 50-70% reduction in adhesion to endothelial cells was observed among H-2Kb transfectants. H-2Kb transfectants had a reduced expression of the alpha 4 integrin subunit, moreover the adhesion of Neo-transfected clones to endothelial cells was reduced to the levels of H-2Kb transfectants by antibodies directed against the beta 1 subunit and the endothelial VCAM-1 molecule, thus suggesting an impairment of the VLA-4/VCAM-1 interaction in H-2Kb transfectants. Adhesion to extracellular matrix components was also strongly decreased: in general the adhesion of H-2Kb cells showed a 50-75% inhibition with respect to Neo or parental controls. The highest difference was observed in adhesion to vitronectin and laminin, the lowest in adhesion to fibronectin. Reduction in adhesive properties of H-2Kb-expressing transfectants could be involved in the reduced metastatic ability, evaluated by means of intravenous injection of cells: H-2Kb transfectants yielded less than ten lung colonies, while all controls produced more than 100. Our data indicate that expression of a single class I MHC gene can significantly alter the metastatic phenotype of MHC-negative tumour cells and this could be related to a general alteration of tumour cell adhesive interactions.

Highlights

  • We have previously observed that H-2 negative cells transfected with a syngeneic H-2Kb gene showed a greatly reduced metastatic ability in mice

  • A greatly reduced metastatic ability of H-2Kb transfected cells has been reported in a previous paper (De Giovanni et al, 1991), where some of the clones hereafter studied were characterized

  • We examined adhesion of parental, Neo and H-2Kb transfected melanoma clones to murine endothelial cells

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Summary

Methods

B78H1 is an amelanotic clone originally obtained in the laboratory of S. Silagi from B16 melanoma (Graf et al, 1984); it shows no H-2 expression even after interferon-'y treatment. The derivation of control (transfected with pSV2neo gene encoding resistance to the neomycin analogue G418) and H-2Kb transfectants has been described previously (De Giovanni et al, 1991). H-2-negative B78H1 and four control clones were compared to five H-2Kb transfectants, one of which (Kb-G56) showed a poor, even though interferoninducible, H-2Kb expression. Cells were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated foetal calf serum (FCS) and 500ILgml-' G418 All the cells used in the experiments reported here were >90% viable as judged by Trypan blue dye exclusion

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