Abstract

A new, sensitive assay based on the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay has been developed for measuring elastolytic activity produced by invasive and/or metastatic tumor cells in culture. Elastin peptides, obtained by treating the insoluble protein with either oxalic acid, KOH, or chymotrypsin, are adsorbed onto the surface of cell culture microtiter plastic wells, and incubated with dilution of standard proteinases or viable normal or tumor cells. The total amount of immobilized elastin peptides is revealed by the mean of specific antibodies, and detected by a microplate reader, while dose- and time-dependent reduction of bound antibodies after incubation with proteases or cells is taken as a measure of elastin degradation. Adsorbed elastin has been found to be available as a substrate for purified enzymes, as well as for living melanoma cells (A2058 and B16-BL6), c-Ha-ras transformed rat embryo fibroblasts, and human pulmonary macrophages, as demonstrated by the release into the culture medium of lower molecular weight digestion products. No degradation was achieved by BALB/3T3 and rat embryo control fibroblasts, and no inhibition was produced by the presence of fetal calf serum which, on the contrary, potentiated the degradation by active cells. This new method, revealing degradation of only a few nanograms of soluble elastin peptides, can be used for studying the importance in tissue invasion and metastasis of elastolytic proteinases produced by cells in culture.

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