A 170-kDa membrane-bound protease is associated with the expression of invasiveness by human malignant melanoma cells.

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Citation

Aoyama A, Chen WT

A 170-kDa membrane-bound protease is associated with the expression of invasiveness by human malignant melanoma cells.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1990 Nov;87(21):8296-300.

PubMed ID
2172980 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Malignant spreading of cancer cells requires cell surface proteases that cleave the crosslinked collagenous matrix of connective tissues. From correlating the morphologically defined invasiveness of tumor cells with the presence of specific membrane-associated proteases, we have identified a malignant human melanoma cell line, LOX, that invades crosslinked gelatin films in vitro and contains uniquely a neutral 170-kDa gelatinase in the cell membrane. A similar gelatinase was found in membranes recovered from culture media conditioned with LOX. The 170-kDa gelatinase is a wheat germ agglutinin-binding protein. The proteolytic activity is maximal at neutral pH, enhanced by EDTA and dithiothreitol, inhibited by the cysteine protease inhibitors N-ethylmaleimide, HgCl2, and phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and can bind to an organomercurial adsorbent, suggesting that it is a neutral sulfhydryl-sensitive protease. This 170-kDa gelatinase of LOX cells was not found in a control melanoma cell line, SK-MEL28, or in 32 other tumor cell lines that did not show extracellular gelatin degradation. Thus, we have identified a large membrane-bound protease that may be a specific marker molecule for melanoma cell invasiveness.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Prolyl endopeptidase FAPQ12884Details