Abstract

We studied the effect of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha), one of the major inflammatory cytokines, on the adhesive reaction of pancreatic cancer cells to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and on the hepatic metastasis of cancer cells in vivo. After TNFalpha stimulation, the expression of E-selectin, an adhesion molecule to neutrophils on HUVECs, increased. In addition, the adhesion of pancreatic cancer cells to HUVECs increased after TNFalpha stimulation, as was observed with neutrophils. The TNFalpha-induced adhesive response depended on the extent of sialyl Lewis(a) expression on cancer cells. The hepatic metastasis in vivo was often observed when cancer cells expressing a high amount of sialyl Lewis(a) were inoculated intrasplenically after increase in plasma TNFalpha concentration by lipopolysaccharide administration. Because sialyl Lewis(a) on cancer cells is a ligand for E-selectin on HUVECs, as sialyl Lewis(x) on neutrophils, TNFalpha upregulated the adhesive interaction between sialyl Lewis(a) on cancer cells and E-selectin on HUVECs. These results suggest that production of TNFalpha after surgical trauma may stimulate the hematogenic metastasis of cancer cells with a high sialyl Lewis(a) expression.

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