The production of various proteolytic enzymes by tumor cells facilitate the invasion of solid tumors into surrounding tissues. We examined three cell lines (M1Dor, M4Be and M3Da) derived from malignant melanoma which exhibited different abilities to grow in nude mice following subcutaneous grafting. By in vitro invasion assay using Boyden-chambers technique, we found that none of those cell lines were able to invade the Matrigel. Several studies have substantiated the role of matrix metalloproteinases (MMP), mainly gelatinases MMP-9 and MMP-2, in melanoma cell invasion. Each cell line constitutively produced MMP-2 (but not MMP-9) in its latent form only, with stronger production for the most tumorigenic cell line in vivo (M3Da). Integrity of the MMP-2 activation process was studied since MMP-2 was also recovered as zymogen at the cell plasma membrane. All cell lines secreted TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 in a constitutive manner and again, but TIMP-2 production as well as MT1-MMP expression were found inversely related to their tumorigenic potential. Plating cells onto type I or type IV collagen did not trigger pro-MMP-2 activation; on the contrary, conversion of pro-MMP-2 to its active form could be evidenced when melanoma cell lines were seeded in a three dimensional type I collagen lattice.
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