Secretion of plasminogen activators by human colorectal and gastric tumor explants

Abstract
Conditioned media from explants of human colorectal and gastric tumors in short-term organ culture were analysed for plasminogen activator activity, activity toward the synthetic urokinase substrate, Spectrozyme-UK, and for the presence of urokinase antigen using monospecific goat antibody, by enzymelinked immunosorbent assay. Comparisons were made between primary tumors, adjacent normal mucosa and metastatic lesions. These analyses were carried out on unfractionated culture fluids and on fractions obtained by fast protein liquid chromatography separation using Superose 6 gels. Plasminogen activator activity, tested by azocaseinolysis in the presence of added plasminogen, was restricted to peaks of 55 kD and 155 kD. These were of the urokinase type as shown by specific immunoinhibition and by absorption by an antiurokinase antibody Affigel 10 column. Spectrozyme-UK, in addition to these peaks, detected a series of higher molecular weight activities, the largest of which appeared in the void volume, and were therefore of >106 molecular weight. These activities were greatly increased by inclusion of trace plasmin indicating that these components were mostly in their proenzyme forms. The characteristics of these very large enzymes were similar to those isolated earlier from a human lung cancer cell line [10]. Comparison of the primary and metastatic tumors confirmed earlier observations showing that urokinase secretion by the metastatic tumors was greatly reduced in comparison with the primary tumors: in the colon carcinomas it was 10 per cent of the value for the primary, in the gastric tumors 3 per cent, whether means or medians were compared (P<0·0001). This large difference was characteristic only of plasminogen activator secretion assayable by azocaseinolysis; activities toward Spectrozyme-UK, and antigen reacting with anti-urokinase antibody, were considerably less different in the two groups. In individual tissues, no correlation was found between the amount of extractable plasminogen activator and amounts secreted, or between the latter and the amount of lactic acid released. It is postulated that the greatly reduced plasminogen activator secretion by explants of metastatic tumors may be a phenotypic characteristic of distinct advantage for cancer cells destined to initiate metastatic foci, and may contribute to the ability of circulating cancer cells to lodge in the blood vessels of the target organ.