Abstract

Recent studies suggest that aspartic proteinase cathepsin D may be implicated in tumor invasion and metastasis either directly by degrading extracellular matrix or indirectly by activating the cysteine proteinases such as procathepsin B, H, and L to mature forms or by inactivating cysteine proteinase inhibitors. In this study we determined for the first time whether increased levels of cathepsin D correlate with glioma progression by enzymatic assay, ELISA, and western blotting. Cathepsin D activity and content were higher in anaplastic astrocytoma and in glioblastoma tissue extracts especially when compared to normal brain tissue and low-grade gliomas. There was a significantly increased intensity of an M r 29 000 band in glioblastoma and anaplastic astrocytoma compared to low-grade glioma and normal brain tissue on Western blotting analysis using its specific antibodies. Cathepsin D antibody inhibited the invasion of glioblastoma cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. These results suggest that the expression of cathepsin D is dramatically upregulated in malignant gliomas, and that its increase correlates with the malignant progression of human gliomas in vivo.

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