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Journal ArticleDOI

Heparan sulfate degradation: relation to tumor invasive and metastatic properties of mouse B16 melanoma sublines

TLDR
The abilities of B16 melanoma cells to extravasate and successfully colonize the lung may be related to their capacities to degrade heparan sulfate in the walls of pulmonary blood vessels.
Abstract
After transport in the blood and implantation in the microcirculation, metastatic tumor cells must invade the vascular endothelium and underlying basal lamina. Mouse B16 melanoma sublines were used to determine the relation between metastatic properties and the ability of the sublines to degrade enzymatically the sulfated glycosaminoglycans present in the extracellular matrix of cultured vascular endothelial cells. Highly invasive and metastatic B16 sublines degraded matrix glycosaminoglycans faster than did sublines of lower metastatic potential. The main products of this matrix degradation were heparan sulfate fragments. Intact B16 cells (or their cell-free homogenates) with a high potential for lung colonization degraded purified heparan sulfate from bovine lung at higher rates than did B16 cells with a poor potential for lung colonization. Analysis of the degradation fragments indicated that B16 cells have a heparan sulfate endoglycosidase. Thus the abilities of B16 melanoma cells to extravasate and successfully colonize the lung may be related to their capacities to degrade heparan sulfate in the walls of pulmonary blood vessels.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Heparin-protein interactions

TL;DR: This review focuses on aspects of heparin structure and conformation, which are important for its interactions with proteins, and describes the interaction ofheparin and heparan sulfate with selected families of heParin-binding proteins.
Journal Article

Selective events in the metastatic process defined by analysis of the sequential dissemination of subpopulations of a mouse mammary tumor.

TL;DR: A panel of 5 subpopulations is evaluated that identifies different points of selective failure in tumor cell dissemination and should be valuable in the assessment of antimetastatic therapies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acidic extracellular microenvironment and cancer

TL;DR: CO2 from the pentose phosphate pathway is an alternative source of acidity, showing that hypoxia and extracellular acidity are, while being independent from each other, deeply associated with the cellular microenvironment.
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Mammalian heparanase: gene cloning, expression and function in tumor progression and metastasis.

TL;DR: This represents the first cloned mammalian heparanase, to the authors' knowledge, and provides direct evidence for its role in tumor metastasis, and enables the development of specific molecular probes for early detection and treatment of cancer metastasis and autoimmune disorders.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Metastatic potential correlates with enzymatic degradation of basement membrane collagen.

TL;DR: The cell lines with the highest incidence of spontaneous metastasis exhibit the greatest level of type IV collagen-degrading activity in two different assays using either living cells or media obtained from cell cultures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The pathogenesis of cancer metastasis

TL;DR: Metastases do not result from random survival of cells released from the primary tumour but from the selective growth of specialised subpopulations of highly metastatic cells endowed with specific properties that befit them to complete each step of the metastatic process.
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In situ detection of mycoplasma contamination in cell cultures by fluorescent Hoechst 33258 stain

TL;DR: A simple, fast, and easily reproducible routine laboratory technique for detecting mycoplasma contamination in cell cultures is reported, with readily discernible, small, morphologically uniform, bright fluorescent bodies in the extranuclear and intercellular space in contrast to the non-contaminated control cultures.
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Selection of successive tumour lines for metastasis.

TL;DR: The pathogenesis of metastasis begins with the invasion of tissues, blood vessels and/or lymphatics by cells originating from a primary cancer, and most tumour emboli are initially arrested in the first capillary bed encountered, but some recirculate and are trapped in other organs.
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