E-selectin binds to squamous cell carcinoma and keratinocyte cell lines.
E-selectin is an endothelial adhesion molecule that binds carbohydrate epitopes on leukocytes and has been implicated in a potential pathway of tumor metastasis. Keratinocyte cell lines express similar carbohydrate epitopes, one of which, sialyl Lewis X (SL-X) is a ligand for E-selectin and is also expressed by squamous cell carcinomas ( SCC) in situ. The functional role of keratinocyte selectin ligands was investigated using a soluble E-selectin chimaeric protein (pE-sel-Ig) containing pig lectin-like and epidermal growth factor-like domains fused to human IgG. After incubation of keratinocyte cell lines (A431 and SVK14) and normal keratinocytes with pE-sel Ig, binding was quantified by flow cytometry. Frozen sections of SCC were overlaid with pE-sel Ig and binding was visualized immunoenzymatically. Immunolabeling was undertaken using monoclonal antibodies (CSLEX-1 and HECA-452), which label E-selectin ligands including sialyl Lewis X. E-selectin bound strongly to A431 and SVK14 cells; the degree of binding paralleled staining intensity with CSLEX-1 antibody. HECA-452 antibody stained A431 cells strongly but SVK14 cells only weakly. Normal keratinocytes and normal epidermis did not express CSLEX-1 or HECA-452 antigens or bind E-selectin. Serial sections of SCC revealed close correlation between fusion protein binding and antibody staining. Antibody pretreatment of tumor sections with CSLEX-1 blocked fusion protein binding, whereas HECA-452 antibody only slightly reduced fusion protein binding. pE-sel Ig pretreated with YT11.1 antibody failed to bind to A431 or SVK14 cells or to SCC. These studies provide functional evidence that SL-X/E-selectin pathways may be important in SCC metastasis and that A431 and SVK14 cells provide a good model to investigate these mechanisms.[1]References
- E-selectin binds to squamous cell carcinoma and keratinocyte cell lines. Allen, M.H., Robinson, M.K., Stephens, P.E., MacDonald, D.M., Barker, J.N. J. Invest. Dermatol. (1996) [Pubmed]
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