Abstract

To clarify interactions between carcinoma and mesenchymal cells, we examined the extracellular matrix-substance remaining on culture dishes after confluent growths of gastric carcinoma cells were removed with EDTA. The matrix synthesized by poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cells (cell lines KATO-III and MKN-45) cultivated in serum-free medium has a fibroblast (cell line WI38)-attachment activity, which is not detected in the matrix synthesized by a well differentiated adenocarcinoma (cell line MKN-28). This activity was not observed in KATO-III-matrix extracted with 6 M urea, but could be detected in a 1% SDS extract from the remaining matrix on the culture dishes after 6 M urea extraction. The activity was abolished by treatment with pronase (16 micrograms/ml), trypsin (0.005%) or alkali, but was unaffected by collagenase (80 micrograms/ml, 4 h) or chondroitinase ABC (1 U ml, 1 h). It is conceivable that the fibroblast-attachment activity of the matrix produced by poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cells is related to the proliferation of interstitial connective tissue in vivo.

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