Expression of Antisense CD44 Variant 6 Inhibits Colorectal Tumor Metastasis and Tumor Growth in a Wound Environment
Overview
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Up-regulation of CD44 variant isoforms has been linked to the progression of epithelial tumors and the metastatic phenotype. Here we report a functional role for CD44 variant isoforms in colorectal cancer metastasis. An antisense mRNA approach was used to down-regulate CD44 variant isoforms containing CD44 variant 6 (v6) in the metastatic colorectal tumor cell line HT29. Cell lines stably expressing antisense CD44 exon 10 (v6) showed reduced expression of alternatively spliced CD44 variant isoforms but no significant change in expression of CD44 core protein, as judged by immunohistochemical analysis using CD44 domain-specific monoclonal antibodies. Expression of antisense exon 10 (v6) had no effect on HT29 tumor cell proliferation in vitro or the ability of the cells to bind immobilized hyaluronan, but it resulted in a reduced capacity to form liver metastases in nude mice following intrasplenic injection. Metastases were not detected in nude mice inoculated with antisense CD44 exon 10 (v6)-expressing cell lines after 4 months, against a background of a 30% metastasis rate in the control HT29 parental and vector alone transfected lines. Furthermore, whereas 82% of mice intrasplenically injected with control HT29 parental and vector alone cell lines developed tumors in incisional wound sites, none of the mice injected with antisense exon 10 expressing HT29 cells developed similar tumors. This is the first demonstration that antisense RNA can be used to selectively inhibit expression of specific domains of a molecule generated through alternative mRNA splicing while allowing expression of core domains to remain unaffected. Furthermore, these results provide direct evidence for a functional role of CD44 variant isoforms in the metastasis of human colorectal tumor cells and may suggest a critical role for CD44 variants in promoting cell growth specifically in the cytokine/growth factor-enriched environment of a wound site.
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