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KMID : 0578319920020030265
Molecules and Cells
1992 Volume.2 No. 3 p.265 ~ p.271
Identification of a Possible Matrix Assembly Receptor to the 28-kDa amino-terminal Fragment of Fivronectin in Chick Myoblasts
Moon, Jyeong-yeop
Shin, KiSoon/Kang, Man-Sik
Abstract
The presence of the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) gene and CEA expression in the liver was tested to identify their possible roles in the liver metastasis of colorectal carcinoma.
The CEA gene in the liver was identified by amplifying the CEA-specific N-terminal domain exon with digoxigenin-dUTP labeling in 16 colorectal carcinomas with liver metastases.
Next, CEA expression was tested by immunostaining using the anti-CEA monoclonal antibody (T84.66,ATCC).
Liver tissues from 13 stomach cancer patients and 12 colorectal cancer patients without liver metastasis were also tested as control groups.
Three grades (£¼25%, 25-50%, and 50%¡Â) were given according to the proportion of positive cells.
The CEA gene was amplified in the metastatic tumor cells of the liver (2.6¡¾ 0.2, mean grade ¡¾ SEM) and their surrounding hepaticytes (1.5¡¾0.2) in all cases. CEA expression was found in all metastatic tumor cells and 14 cases of the surrounding hepatocytes.
Among the control groups, the CEA gene of the hepatocytes was found in 9 cases each of the colorectal and the stomach cancers that did not exhibit CEA expression.
The level of serum CEA was related with the numbers and volume of liver metastases, but not with CEA expression in tumor cells and surrounding hepatocytes.
The CEA gene in the metastatic tumor cells, not in the hepatocytes, was closely associated with CEA expression in the surrounding hepatocytes (p£¼0.01).
Although the precise mechanism of CEA gene regulation in hepatocytes remains to be proven, the CEA gene in the metastatic tumor of the liver seems to affect CEA expression in the surrounding hepatocytes facilitating liver metastasis in colorectal carcinoma.
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