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In vitro particulate adherence to fibronectin: correlation with in vivo particulate adherence to sites of bladder injury. J Urol 1992 May;147(5):1416-23

Date

05/01/1992

Pubmed ID

1569698

DOI

10.1016/s0022-5347(17)37585-7

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0026687416 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   15 Citations

Abstract

This study examined the role of fibronectin in promoting particulate attachment to sites of urothelial injury. Variables influencing adherence of the rat transitional carcinoma cell line 4909 and "non-cellular" styrene-divinylbenzene microspheres to fibronectin were studied in an in vitro system. A soluble synthetic peptide fragment (Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser [GRGDS]) duplicating the receptor binding domain of fibronectin (RGD) was used to determine whether cell adherence could be inhibited by fibronectin receptor blockade. In vitro findings were correlated with an in vivo assay of both cellular and non-cellular particulate adherence to injured urothelium. Time, plated cell density, substrate concentration, GRGDS concentration, and cell viability, were all found to be significant independent variables influencing in vitro cellular adherence (p less than 0.0001). Receptor blockade with GRGDS significantly decreased in vitro tumor cell adherence to fibronectin. In vitro microsphere binding increased as a direct function of fibronectin concentration but was not time dependent (p less than 0.0001 and p = 0.14 for fibronectin concentration and time respectively). The in vivo adherence of both tumor cells and microspheres was significantly increased in injured bladders compared to controls (p less than 0.01). Receptor blockade with GRGDS failed to inhibit in vivo cell adherence to sites of urothelial injury. Microspheres proved to be competitive inhibitors of cellular adherence in competitive binding assays. In vitro microsphere binding demonstrated a pH dependence with maximal binding at pH 7.2. These data suggest that in vitro tumor cell adherence to fibronectin differs from in vivo tumor cell adherence to sites of urothelial injury. Manipulations which inhibit in vitro adherence, specifically fibronectin receptor blockade and cell death, fail to effect in vivo binding to the extreme that non-cellular particulate appears to bind to the same site, and with similar affinity, as cellular particles.

Author List

See WA, Rohlf DP, Crist SA



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Animals
Binding, Competitive
Cell Adhesion
Female
Fibronectins
Microspheres
Peptide Fragments
Protein Binding
Rats
Rats, Inbred F344
Urinary Bladder
Urinary Bladder Neoplasms