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1.
Hyaluronan is a major component of the pericellular matrix surrounding tumor cells, including colon carcinomas. Elevated cycooxygenase-2 levels have been implicated in several malignant properties of colon cancer. We now show for the first time a strong link between hyaluronan-CD44 interaction and cyclooxygenase-2 in colon cancer cells. First, we have shown that increased expression of hyaluronan synthase-2 induces malignant cell properties, including increased proliferation, anchorage-independent growth, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition in HIEC6 cells. Second, constitutive hyaluronan-CD44 interaction stimulates a signaling pathway involving ErbB2, phosphoinositide 3-kinase/AKT, beta-catenin, and cyclooxygenase-2/prostaglandin E(2) in HCA7 colon carcinoma cells. Third, the HA/CD44-activated ErbB2 --> phosphoinositide 3-kinase/AKT --> beta-catenin pathway stimulates cell survival/cell proliferation through COX-2 induction in hyaluronan-overexpressing HIEC6 cells and in HCA7 cells. Fourth, perturbation of hyaluronan-CD44 interaction by hyaluronan oligomers or CD44-silencing RNA decreases cyclooxygenase-2 expression and enzyme activity, and inhibition of cyclooxygenase-2 decreases hyaluronan production suggesting the possibility of an amplifying positive feedback loop between hyaluronan and cyclooxygenase-2. We conclude that hyaluronan is an important endogenous regulator of colon cancer cell survival properties and that cyclooxygenase-2 is a major mediator of these hyaluronan-induced effects. Defining hyaluronan-dependent cyclooxygenase-2/prostaglandin E(2)-associated signaling pathways will provide a platform for developing novel therapeutic approaches for colon cancer.  相似文献   

2.
Hyaluronan oligosaccharides (molecular weight: approximately 2.5 x 10(3)) inhibit growth of several types of tumors in vivo. In vitro, the oligomers inhibit anchorage-independent growth of several tumor cell types. In accordance with this finding, the oligomers also induce apoptosis and stimulate caspase-3 activity under anchorage-independent conditions. Since inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) mimic the action of hyaluronan oligomers and since the PI 3-kinase/Akt (protein kinase B) cell survival pathway has previously been implicated in anchorage-independent growth of tumor cells, we examined the effect of oligomers on PI 3-kinase and its downstream activities in TA3/St murine mammary carcinoma and HCT 116 human colon carcinoma cells. We observed that 50-150 microg/ml hyaluronan oligomers inhibit PI 3-kinase activity and phosphorylation of Akt to approximately the same extent as optimal doses of wortmannin and LY294002, known inhibitors of PI 3-kinase. Similar inhibition of downstream events, i.e. phosphorylation of BAD and FKHR, was also observed. These effects were not observed on treatment with similar concentrations of chitin oligomers, chondroitin sulfate, or hyaluronan polymer. High molecular weight (approximately 2 x 10(6)) and low molecular weight (approximately 8 x 10(4)) preparations of hyaluronan polymer were equally ineffective. The effects of hyaluronan oligomers on these parameters were similar in magnitude to the effect of treatment with activity-blocking antibody against CD44. We interpret these results to indicate that the oligomers competitively block binding of endogenous hyaluronan polymer to CD44, consequently giving rise to attenuated signaling. Finally, we observed that hyaluronan oligomers, but not chitin oligomers, chondroitin sulfate, or hyaluronan polymer, stimulate expression of PTEN, a phosphatase that degrades the major signaling product of PI 3-kinase action, phosphoinositide 3,4,5-trisphosphate. We conclude that perturbation of hyaluronan-CD44 binding leads to suppression of the PI 3-kinase/Akt cell survival pathway and consequently to inhibition of anchorage-independent growth in culture and tumor growth in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Multidrug resistance is a potent barrier to effective, long term therapy in cancer patients. It is frequently attributed to enhanced expression of multidrug transporters or to the action of receptor kinases, such as ErbB2, and downstream anti-apoptotic signaling pathways, such as the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway. However, very few connections have been made between receptor kinases or anti-apoptotic pathways and multidrug transporter expression or function. Data presented herein show that constitutive interaction of the pericellular polysaccharide, hyaluronan, with its receptor, CD44, regulates assembly and activation of an ErbB2-containing signaling complex, which in turn stimulates phosphoinositide 3-kinase activity in multidrug-resistant MCF-7/Adr human breast carcinoma cells. Phosphoinositide 3-kinase activates Akt and downstream anti-apoptotic events, which contribute to drug resistance. However, hyaluronan and phosphoinositide 3-kinase stimulate expression of the multidrug transporter, MDR1 (P-glycoprotein), in an interdependent, but Akt-independent, manner. Furthermore, constitutively active phosphoinositide 3-kinase, but not Akt, stimulates hyaluronan production. These Akt-independent effects are dominant over the effects of Akt on doxorubicin resistance in MCF-7/Adr cells. Thus hyaluronan, phosphoinositide 3-kinase, and ErbB2 form a positive feedback loop that strongly amplifies MDR1 expression and regulates drug resistance in these cells. This pathway may also be important in progression of other malignant characteristics. These results illustrate the potential importance of hyaluronan as a therapeutic target in multidrug-resistant carcinomas.  相似文献   

4.
Versican is a hyaluronan-binding, extracellular chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan produced by several tumor types, including malignant melanoma, which exists as four different splice variants. The short V3 isoform contains the G1 and G3 terminal domains of versican that may potentially interact directly or indirectly with the hyaluronan receptor CD44 and the EGFR, respectively. We have previously described that overexpression of V3 in MeWo human melanoma cells markedly reduces tumor cell growth in vitro and in vivo. In this study we have investigated the signaling mechanism of V3 by silencing the expression of CD44 in control and V3-expressing melanoma cells. Suppression of CD44 had the same effects on cell proliferation and cell migration than those provoked by V3 expression, suggesting that V3 acts through a CD44-mediated mechanism. Furthermore, CD44-dependent hyaluronan internalization was blocked by V3 expression and CD44 silencing, leading to an accumulation of this glycosaminoglycan in the pericellular matrix and to changes in cell migration on hyaluronan. Furthermore, ERK1/2 and p38 activation after EGF treatment were decreased in V3-expressing cells suggesting that V3 may also interact with the EGFR through its G3 domain. The existence of a EGFR/ErbB2 receptor complex able to interact with CD44 was identified in MeWo melanoma cells. V3 overexpression resulted in a reduced interaction between EGFR/ErbB2 and CD44 in response to EGF treatment. Our results indicate that the V3 isoform of versican interferes with CD44 and the CD44-EGFR/ErbB2 interaction, altering the signaling pathways, such as ERK1/2 and p38 MAPK, that regulate cell proliferation and migration.  相似文献   

5.
The immunoglobulin superfamily glycoprotein CD147 (emmprin; basigin) is associated with an invasive phenotype in various types of cancers, including malignant breast cancer. We showed recently that up-regulation of CD147 in non-transformed, non-invasive breast epithelial cells is sufficient to induce an invasive phenotype characterized by membrane type-1 matrix metalloproteinase (MT1-MMP)-dependent invadopodia activity (Grass, G. D., Bratoeva, M., and Toole, B. P. (2012) Regulation of invadopodia formation and activity by CD147. J. Cell Sci. 125, 777–788). Here we found that CD147 induces breast epithelial cell invasiveness by promoting epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-Ras-ERK signaling in a manner dependent on hyaluronan-CD44 interaction. Furthermore, CD147 promotes assembly of signaling complexes containing CD147, CD44, and EGFR in lipid raftlike domains. We also found that oncogenic Ras regulates CD147 expression, hyaluronan synthesis, and formation of CD147-CD44-EGFR complexes, thus forming a positive feedback loop that may amplify invasiveness. Last, we showed that malignant breast cancer cells are heterogeneous in their expression of surface-associated CD147 and that high levels of membrane CD147 correlate with cell surface EGFR and CD44 levels, activated EGFR and ERK1, and activated invadopodia. Future studies should evaluate CD147 as a potential therapeutic target and disease stratification marker in breast cancer.  相似文献   

6.
Heregulin (HRG)-induced cell responses are mediated by the ErbB family of tyrosine kinase receptors. In this study we have investigated HRG activation of ErbB2, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling, and their role in regulating hyaluronan synthase (HAS) activity in human ovarian tumor cells (SK-OV-3.ipl cells). Immunological and biochemical analyses indicate that ErbB2, ErbB3, and ErbB4 are all expressed in SK-OV-3.ipl cells and that ErbB4 (but not ErbB3) is physically linked to ErbB2 following HRG stimulation. Furthermore, our data indicate that the HRG-induced ErbB2.ErbB4 complexes stimulate ErbB2 tyrosine kinase, which induces both ERK phosphorylation and kinase activity. The activated ERK then increases the phosphorylation of HAS1, HAS2, and HAS3. Consequently, all three HAS isozymes are activated resulting in hyaluronan (HA) production. Because HRG-mediated HAS isozyme phosphorylation/activation can be effectively blocked by either AG825 (an ErbB2 inhibitor) or thiazolidinedione compound (an ERK blocker), we conclude that ErbB2-ERK signaling and HAS isozyme phosphorylation/HA production are functionally coupled in SK-OV-3.ipl cells. HRG also promotes HA- and CD44-dependent oncogenic events (e.g. CD44-Cdc42 association, p21-activated kinase 1 activation, and p21-activated kinase 1-filamin complex formation) and tumor cell-specific behaviors in an ErbB2-ERK signaling-dependent manner. Finally, we have found that the down-regulation of HAS isozyme expression (by transfecting cells with HAS1/HAS2/HAS3-specific small interfering RNAs) not only inhibits HRG-mediated HAS phosphorylation/activation and HA production but also impairs CD44-specific Cdc42-PAK1/filamin signaling, cytoskeleton activation and tumor cell behaviors. Taken together, these findings clearly indicate that HRG activation of ErbB2-ERK signaling modulates HAS phosphorylation/activation and HA production leading to CD44-mediated oncogenic events and ovarian cancer progression.  相似文献   

7.
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9.
CD44 is a principal cell-surface receptor for hyaluronan (HA). Up-regulation of CD44 is often associated with morphogenesis and tumor invasion. On the contrary, reduction of cell-cell adhesion due to down-regulation of E-cadherin is associated with the invasive and metastatic phenotype of carcinomas. In our current study, we investigated the functional relationship between CD44 and E-cadherin. We established an inverse correlation between CD44 and E-cadherin indicating that the cells expressing higher levels of E-cadherin display weaker binding affinity between CD44 and HA. By using TA3 murine mammary carcinoma (TA3) cells, which display CD44-dependent HA binding, branching morphogenesis, and invasion, we demonstrated an inverse functional relationship between CD44 and E-cadherin by transfecting exogenous E-cadherin into the cells. Our results showed that increased expression of E-cadherin in TA3 cells, but not ICAM-1, weakens the binding between CD44 and HA and blocks spreading of the cells on HA substratum and CD44-mediated branching morphogenesis and tumor cell invasion. The results reported here demonstrated for the first time that E-cadherin negatively regulated CD44-HA interaction and CD44 function and suggested that balanced function of CD44 and E-cadherin may be essential for normal epithelial cell functions, and imbalanced up-regulation of CD44 function and/or down-regulation of E-cadherin function likely contributes to tumor progression.  相似文献   

10.
Hyaluronan exerts a variety of biological effects on cells including changes in cell migration, proliferation, and matrix metabolism. However, the signaling pathways associated with the action of hyaluronan on cells have not been clearly defined. In some cells, signaling is induced by the loss of cell-hyaluronan interactions. The goal of this study was to use hyaluronan oligosaccharides as a molecular tool to explore the effects of changes in cell-hyaluronan interactions and determine the underlying molecular events that become activated. In this study, hyaluronan oligosaccharides induced the loss of extracellular matrix proteoglycan and collagen from cultured slices of normal adult human articular cartilage. This loss was coincident with an increased expression of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-13. MMP-13 expression was also induced in articular chondrocytes by hyaluronan (HA) hexasaccharides but not by HA tetrasaccharides nor high molecular weight hyaluronan. MMP-13 promoter-reporter constructs in CD44-null COS-7 cells revealed that both CD44-dependent and CD44-independent events mediate the induction of MMP-13 by hyaluronan oligosaccharides. Electromobility gel shift assays demonstrated the activation of chondrocyte NFkappaB by hyaluronan oligosaccharides. NFkappaB activation was also documented in C-28/I2 immortalized human chondrocytes by luciferase promoter assays and phosphorylation of IKK-alpha/beta. The link between activation of NFkappaB and MMP-13 induction by HA oligosaccharides was further confirmed through the use of the NFkappaB inhibitor helenalin. Inhibition of MAP kinases also demonstrated the involvement of p38 MAP kinase in the hyaluronan oligosaccharide induction of MMP-13. Our findings suggest that hyaluronan-CD44 interactions affect matrix metabolism via activation of NFkappaB and p38 MAP kinase.  相似文献   

11.
During carcinoma progression, tumor cells often undergo changes similar (but not identical) to epithelialmesenchymal transitions in embryonic development. In this study, we demonstrate that experimental stimulation of hyaluronan synthesis in normal epithelial cells is sufficient to induce mesenchymal and transformed characteristics. Using recombinant adenoviral expression of hyaluronan synthase-2, we show that increased hyaluronan production promotes anchorage-independent growth and invasiveness, induces gelatinase production, and stimulates phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway activity in phenotypically normal Madin-Darby canine kidney and MCF-10A human mammary epithelial cells. Cells infected with hyaluronan synthase-2 adenovirus also acquired mesenchymal characteristics, including up-regulation of vimentin, dispersion of cytokeratin, and loss of organized adhesion proteins at intercellular boundaries. Furthermore, we show that the transforming effects of two well described agents, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and beta-catenin, are dependent on hyaluronan-cell interactions. Perturbation of endogenous hyaluronan polymer interactions by treatment with hyaluronan oligomers is shown here to reverse the transforming effects of HGF and beta-catenin in Madin-Darby canine kidney and MCF-10A human mammary epithelial cells. Also, HGF and beta-catenin induced assembly of hyaluronan-dependent pericellular matrices similar to those surrounding mesenchymal cells. Thus, increased expression of hyaluronan is sufficient to induce epithelial-mesenchymal transition and acquisition of transformed properties in phenotypically normal epithelial cells.  相似文献   

12.
In this study we have investigated hyaluronan (HA)-CD44 interaction with protein kinase N-gamma (PKNgamma), a small GTPase (Rac1)-activated serine/threonine kinase in human keratinocytes. By using a variety of biochemical and molecular biological techniques, we have determined that CD44 and PKNgamma kinase (molecular mass approximately 120 kDa) are physically linked in vivo. The binding of HA to keratinocytes promotes PKNgamma kinase recruitment into a complex with CD44 and subsequently stimulates Rac1-mediated PKNgamma kinase activity. The Rac1-activated PKNgamma in turn increases threonine (but not serine) phosphorylation of phospholipase C (PLC) gamma1 and up-regulates PLCgamma1 activity leading to the onset of intracellular Ca(2+) mobilization. HA/CD44-activated Rac1-PKNgamma also phosphorylates the cytoskeletal protein, cortactin, at serine/threonine residues. The phosphorylation of cortactin by Rac1-PKNgamma attenuates its ability to cross-link filamentous actin in vitro. Further analyses indicate that the N-terminal antiparallel coiled-coil (ACC) domains of PKNgamma interact directly with Rac1 in a GTP-dependent manner. The binding of HA to CD44 induces PKNgamma association with endogenous Rac1 and its activity in keratinocytes. Transfection of keratinocytes with PKNgamma-ACCcDNA reduces HA-mediated recruitment of endogenous Rac1 to PKNgamma and blocks PKNgamma activity. These findings suggest that the PKNgamma-ACC fragment acts as a potent competitive inhibitor of endogenous Rac1 binding to PKNgamma in vivo. Most important, the PKNgamma-ACC fragment functions as a strong dominant-negative mutant that effectively inhibits HA/CD44-mediated PKNgamma phosphorylation of PLCgamma1 and cortactin as well as keratinocyte signaling (e.g. Ca(2+) mobilization and cortactin-actin binding) and cellular functioning (e.g. cell-cell adhesion and differentiation). Taken together, these findings strongly suggest that hyaluronan-CD44 interaction with Rac1-PKNgamma plays a pivotal role in PLCgamma1-regulated Ca(2+) signaling and cortactin-cytoskeleton function required for keratinocyte cell-cell adhesion and differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Identification of genes that are upregulated during mammary epithelial cell morphogenesis may reveal novel regulators of tumorigenesis. We have demonstrated that gene expression programs in mammary epithelial cells grown in monolayer cultures differ significantly from those in three-dimensional (3D) cultures. We identify a protein tyrosine phosphate, PTPRO, that was upregulated in mature MCF-10A mammary epithelial 3D structures but had low to undetectable levels in monolayer cultures. Downregulation of PTPRO by RNA interference inhibited proliferation arrest during morphogenesis. Low levels of PTPRO expression correlated with reduced survival for breast cancer patients, suggesting a tumor suppressor function. Furthermore, we showed that the receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB2/HER2 is a direct substrate of PTPRO and that loss of PTPRO increased ErbB2-induced cell proliferation and transformation, together with tyrosine phosphorylation of ErbB2. Moreover, in patients with ErbB2-positive breast tumors, low PTPRO expression correlated with poor clinical prognosis compared to ErbB2-positive patients with high levels of PTPRO. Thus, PTPRO is a novel regulator of ErbB2 signaling, a potential tumor suppressor, and a novel prognostic marker for patients with ErbB2-positive breast cancers. We have identified the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPRO as a regulator of three-dimensional epithelial morphogenesis of mammary epithelial cells and as a regulator of ErbB2-mediated transformation. In addition, we demonstrated that ErbB2 is a direct substrate of PTPRO and that decreased expression of PTPRO predicts poor prognosis for ErbB2-positive breast cancer patients. Thus, our results identify PTPRO as a novel regulator of mammary epithelial transformation, a potential tumor suppressor, and a predictive biomarker for breast cancer.  相似文献   

15.
The main aim of our study is to determine the significance of the stromal microenvironment in the malignant behavior of prostate cancer. The stroma-derived growth factors/cytokines and hyaluronan act in autocrine/paracrine ways with their receptors, including receptor-tyrosine kinases and CD44 variants (CD44v), to potentiate and support tumor epithelial cell survival. Overexpression of hyaluronan, CD44v9 variants, and stroma-derived growth factors/cytokines are specific features in many cancers, including prostate cancer. Androgen/androgen receptor interaction has a critical role in regulating prostate cancer growth. Our previous study showed that 1) that increased synthesis of hyaluronan in normal epithelial cells promotes expression of CD44 variants; 2) hyaluronan interaction with CD44v6-v9 promotes activation of receptor-tyrosine kinase, which stimulates phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-induced cell survival pathways; and 3) CD44v6/short hairpin RNA reduces colon tumor growth in vivo (Misra, S., Hascall, V. C., De Giovanni, C., Markwald, R. R., and Ghatak, S. (2009) J. Biol. Chem. 284, 12432–12446). Our results now show that hepatocyte growth factor synthesized by myofibroblasts associated with prostate cancer cells induces activation of HGF-receptor/cMet and stimulates hyaluronan/CD44v9 signaling. This, in turn, stabilizes the androgen receptor functions in prostate cancer cells. The stroma-derived HGF induces a lipid raft-associated signaling complex that contains CD44v9, cMet/phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, HSP90 and androgen receptor. CD44v9/short hairpin RNA reverses the assembly of these components in the complex and inhibits androgen receptor function. Our results provide new insight into the hyaluronan/CD44v9-regulated androgen receptor function and the consequent malignant activities in prostate cancer cells. The present study describes a physiologically relevant in vitro model for studying the molecular mechanisms by which stroma-derived HGF and hyaluronan influence androgen receptor and CD44 functions in the secretory epithelia during prostate carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

16.
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) and 5-lipoxygenase (5-LOX) enzyme have been found to play a role in promoting growth in colon cancer cell lines. The di-tert-butyl phenol class of compounds has been found to inhibit both COX-2 and 5-LOX enzymes with proven effectiveness in arresting tumor growth. In the present study, the structural analogs of 2,6 di-tert-butyl-p-benzoquinone (BQ) appended with hydrazide side chain were found to inhibit COX-2 and 5-LOX enzymes at micromolar concentrations. Molecular docking of the compounds into COX-2 and 5-LOX protein cavities indicated strong binding interactions supporting the observed cytototoxicities. The signaling interaction between endogenous hyaluronan and CD44 has been shown to regulate COX-2 activities through ErbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) activation. In the present studies it has been observed for the first time, that three of our COX/5-LOX dual inhibitors inhibit proliferation upon hydrazide substitution and prevent the activity of pro-angiogenic factors in HCA-7, HT-29, Apc10.1 cells as well as the hyaluronan synthase-2 (Has2) enzyme over-expressed in colon cancer cells, through inhibition of the hyaluronan/CD44v6 cell survival pathway. Since there is a substantial enhancement in the antiproliferative activities of these compounds upon hydrazide substitution, the present work opens up new opportunities for evolving novel active compounds of BQ series for inhibiting colon cancer.  相似文献   

17.
Overexpression of the ErbB2 receptor in one-third of human breast cancers contributes to the transformation of epithelial cells and predicts poor prognosis for breast cancer patients. We report that the overexpression of ErbB2 inhibits IGF-I-induced MAPK signaling. IGF-I-induced MAPK phosphorylation and MAPK kinase activity are reduced in ErbB2 overexpressing MCF-7/HER2-18 cells relative to control MCF-7/neo cells. In SKBR3/IGF-IR cells, reduction of ErbB2 by antisense methodology restores the IGF-I-induced MAPK activation. The inhibition of IGF-I-induced MAP kinase activation in ErbB2 overexpressing breast cancer cells is correlated with decreased IGF-I-induced Shc tyrosine-phosphorylation, leading to a decreased association of Grb2 with Shc and decreased Raf phosphorylation. However, IGF-I-induced tyrosine-phosphorylation of IGF-I receptor and IRS-I and AKT phosphorylation were unaffected by ErbB2 overexpression. Consistent with these results, we observed that the proportion of IGF-I-stimulated proliferation blocked by the MAPK inhibitor PD98059 fell from 82.6% in MCF-7/neo cells to 41.2% in MCF-7/HER2-18 cells. These data provide evidence for interplay between the IGF-IR and ErbB2 signaling pathways. They are consistent with the view that the IGF-IR mediated attenuation of trastuzumab-induced growth inhibition we recently described is dependent on IGF-I-induced PI3K signaling rather than IGF-I-induced MAPK signaling.  相似文献   

18.
Hyaluronan and its major receptor CD44 are ubiquitously distributed. They have important structural as well as signaling roles, regulating tissue homeostasis, and their expression levels are tightly regulated. In addition to signaling initiated by the interaction of the intracellular domain of CD44 with cytoplasmic signaling molecules, CD44 has important roles as a co-receptor for different types of receptors of growth factors and cytokines. Dysregulation of hyaluronan-CD44 interactions is seen in diseases, such as inflammation and cancer. In the present communication, we discuss the mechanism of hyaluronan-induced signaling via CD44, as well as the involvement of hyaluronan-engaged CD44 in malignancies and in viral infections.  相似文献   

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20.
CD44: functional relevance to inflammation and malignancy   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
CD44 is a principal cell surface receptor for hyaluronan, a major component of extracellular matrices. Cells are surrounded by and encounter matrix in vivo, which in turn serves a variety of cell functions through the direct adhesion via their receptors. CD44 communicates cell-matrix interactions into the cell via "outside-in signaling" and has an important role in biological activities. The interaction of CD44 with fragmented hyaluronan on rheumatoid synovial cells induces expression of VCAM-1 and Fas on the cells, which leads to Fas-mediated apoptosis of synovial cells by the interaction of T cells bearing FasL. On the other hand, engagement of CD44 on tumor cells derived from lung cancer reduces Fas expression and Fas-mediated apoptosis, resulting in less susceptibility of the cells to CTL-mediated cytotoxicity through Fas-FasL pathway. Thus, although the CD44-mediated signaling differs among cells and circumstances, we here propose the functional role of CD44 in inflammatory processes and tumor susceptibility and the rational design of future therapeutic strategies including the exploitation of CD44-mediated pathway in vivo.  相似文献   

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