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Ovarian cancers overexpress the antimicrobial protein hCAP‐18 and its derivative LL‐37 increases ovarian cancer cell proliferation and invasion
Author(s) -
Coffelt Seth B.,
Waterman Ruth S.,
Florez Luisa,
Bentrup Kerstin Höner zu,
Zwezdaryk Kevin J.,
Tomchuck Suzanne L.,
LaMarca Heather L.,
Danka Elizabeth S.,
Morris Cindy A.,
Scandurro Aline B.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.23186
Subject(s) - ovarian cancer , biology , stromal cell , angiogenesis , cancer research , immune system , carcinogenesis , ovarian tumor , cell growth , cancer , immunology , genetics
The role of the pro‐inflammatory peptide, LL‐37, and its pro‐form, human cationic antimicrobial protein 18 (hCAP‐18), in cancer development and progression is poorly understood. In damaged and inflamed tissue, LL‐37 functions as a chemoattractant, mitogen and pro‐angiogenic factor suggesting that the peptide may potentiate tumor progression. The aim of this study was to characterize the distribution of hCAP‐18/LL‐37 in normal and cancerous ovarian tissue and to examine the effects of LL‐37 on ovarian cancer cells. Expression of hCAP‐18/LL‐37 was localized to immune and granulosa cells of normal ovarian tissue. By contrast, ovarian tumors displayed significantly higher levels of hCAP‐18/LL‐37 where expression was observed in tumor and stromal cells. Protein expression was statistically compared to the degree of immune cell infiltration and microvessel density in epithelial‐derived ovarian tumors and a significant correlation was observed for both. It was demonstrated that ovarian tumor tissue lysates and ovarian cancer cell lines express hCAP‐18/LL‐37. Treatment of ovarian cancer cell lines with recombinant LL‐37 stimulated proliferation, chemotaxis, invasion and matrix metalloproteinase expression. These data demonstrate for the first time that hCAP‐18/LL‐37 is significantly overexpressed in ovarian tumors and suggest LL‐37 may contribute to ovarian tumorigenesis through direct stimulation of tumor cells, initiation of angiogenesis and recruitment of immune cells. These data provide further evidence of the existing relationship between pro‐inflammatory molecules and ovarian cancer progression. © 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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