Abstract

Tumour basement membrane (BM) is an extracellular matrix produced by tumour cells of epithelial origin. We examined the structure and function of the tumour BM of tumour tissues formed by Lewis lung carcinoma-derived cloned cell lines (P29, LM12-3 and LM60-D6 cells) with low, medium and high metastatic potentials, respectively. Immunohistochemical staining of major BM constituents laminin and type IV collagen demonstrated that all the cell lines produced and deposited these materials extracellularly in vivo. However, the continuity of the tumour BM composed of these materials was much greater in the higher metastatic LM12-3 and LM60-D6 tumours than in those with the low metastatic P29 tumour. Electron microscopic examination revealed that in the higher metastatic tumours, especially the LM60-D6 tumour, the tumour BM had a highly organized structure consisting of lamina densa and lamina rara. Parallel bilayers of BM and their fusion were often observed and tumour cells were in direct contact with the BM. In the vicinity of tumour blood vessels, similar interactions between the tumour BM and the vascular BM were observed, and the tumour cells rested on their own BM, the fused BM or the vascular BM. In contrast, in the low metastatic tumour in which the tumour BM was not clearly defined, this close contact between tumour cells and the vascular BM was not observed. In vitro studies showed that the higher metastatic cells adhered more firmly than the LMP cells to a subendothelial matrix. These results suggest that the adhesiveness of tumour cells to the vascular BM in vivo is correlated with their ability to form an integrated BM in vivo, and that this adhesiveness of the tumour cells may be mediated in part by the tumour BM via BM fusion.

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