Summary Because of the highly aggressive behaviour, i.e. invasive, disseminative and metastatic properties, the outcome for patients with pancreatic cancer is morbid. A better understanding and interference with the malignant behaviour of pancreatic cancer may provide new directions for treatment. We report here the induction of highly motile and invasive properties in human pancreatic cancer cells by hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and blockage of these properties by NK4, a newly identified antagonist for HGF. In all of eight human pancreatic cancer cell lines we used (AsPC-1, BxPC-3, H-48N, KP-1N, KP-2, KP-3, MIA PaCa-2 and SUIT-2 cells), the c-Met/HGF receptor was expressed at varying levels. Although weak mitogenic activity of HGF was seen only in SUIT-2 and KP-3 cells, HGF strongly stimulated migration and invasion of these pancreatic cancer cells, except for BxPC-3 and MIA PaCa-2 cells. In contrast, migration and invasion potently induced by HGF in KP-1N, KP-3 and SUIT-2 cells were inhibited by NK4. The invasion of SUIT-2 cells was also potently stimulated with the influence of cocultured pancreatic fibroblasts and by ascitic fluid obtained after pancreatic cancer resection, however, invasiveness of the cancer cells in such conditions was practically abolished by NK4. Consistently, the ascitic fluid in patients who had undergone pancreatic cancer surgery contained high levels of HGF. These findings mean that HGF is probably involved in invasion, dissemination, and metastasis of pancreatic cancer, particularly through tumour-stromal interaction and after resection of the pancreatic cancer. While competitive inhibitory effects of NK4 on HGF and cMet/receptor interaction have been demonstrated in some distinct types of human cancer cells (Date et al, 1998;Hiscox et al, 2000;Kuba et al, 2000;Parr et al, 2000), inhibitory and promising therapeutic effects of NK4 have to be evaluated in cases of highly aggressive pancreatic cancer. In the current study, cancer-stromal interaction through HGF and c-Met coupling and inhibitory effects of NK4 were investigated in human pancreatic cancer cells. The invasion of pancreatic cancer cells was potently stimulated by HGF, cocultivation with fibroblasts, and by ascitic fluid from patients who had undergone pancreatic cancer resection, but this invasion was almost completely inhibited by NK4. The potential inhibition of pancreatic cancer invasion and dissemination by NK4 was thus deemed worthy of investigation.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
MaterialsHuman recombinant HGF was purified from the conditioned medium of Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with human HGF cDNA (Nakamura et al, 1989;Seki et al, 1990). Polyclonal antibody against human HGF was prepared from the serum of a rabbit immunized with human recombinant HGF and IgG was purified using protein A-Sepharose (Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala). Anti-human HGF IgG (1 µg ml -1 ) completely neutralized the biological activities of 1 ng ml -1 human HGF. NK4 was prepared by proteolytic digestion with elastase, as described elsewher...