Abstract
The hyaluronan-rich matrix that surrounds many tumours and facilitates tumour cell growth and invasion is thought to be predominantly synthesized by normal stromal cells stimulated by tumour cell-derived factors. This study examines the possibility that the production of tumour cell-derived factors that stimulate fibroblast glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis may be blocked by exposure to differentiation-inducing agents such as retinoic acid. We have demonstrated that Hs294T, C8161 and A375 human melanoma cell lines release factors into their medium that stimulate normal fibroblast GAG synthesis. Exposure of these melanoma cells to retinoic acid failed to mediate any significant reduction in growth over a 7-day period. Retinoic acid failed to block the tumour cell production of GAG-stimulating activities and even enhanced the activities produced by the C8161 cell line, particularly at low retinoic acid concentrations (48% stimulation at 10(-9) M retinoic acid; P < 0.02). Addition of retinoic acid directly to fibroblast cultures exposed to fibroblast-conditioned medium resulted in an inhibition of GAG synthesis with a 33% inhibition observed at 10(-5) M. Addition of retinoic acid to fibroblast cultures exposed to the tumour cell-conditioned medium failed to inhibit the stimulation of GAG synthesis. Other differentiation-inducing agents, such as hexamethylene-bis-acetamide and butyrate, also failed to block the production of tumour cell-derived GAG-stimulating activities. These results demonstrate that retinoic acid and other differentiation-inducing agents fail to inhibit melanoma cell production of fibroblast GAG synthesis-stimulating factors or their action upon fibroblasts.
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