J. Byrd, R. Dahiya, J. Huang
Sep 1, 1995
Citations
6
Influential Citations
31
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
European journal of cancer
Abstract
Previous studies from our laboratory have shown that benzyl-alpha-GalNAc inhibits the glycosylation of mucin in colon cancer cells. In this study, we determined whether benzyl-alpha-GalNAc inhibits mucin glycosylation in KATO III gastric cancer cells. We also examined its effects on expression of mucin antigens, and compared the mucins made by KATO III with those of a colonic cancer cell line, Caco-2. Results of these experiments suggest that benzyl-alpha-GalNAc (2 mM) inhibited [3H]glucosamine labelling of mucins by 82% in KATO III and by 70% in Caco-2. For both cell lines, the mucin secreted in the presence of benzyl-alpha-GalNAc was less acidic. Both cell lines secreted benzyl-oligosaccharides, but those from KATO III (8-9 sugars) were larger than those from Caco-2 (6-7 sugars). In mucins purified from the medium of treated cells, peripheral carbohydrate antigens (sialyl Lex in KATO III and terminal fucose in Caco-2) were decreased (compared with control), while core carbohydrate antigens (T antigen in both cell lines and sialyl Tn in Caco-2) were increased. Western blots of cell homogenates showed differences between KATO III and Caco-2 in MUC 1 apomucin protein antigens, in sialyl Lex and in sialyl Tn antigens. We conclude that benzyl-alpha-GalNAc does inhibit the glycosylation of mucin in KATO III gastric cancer cells as in human colon cancer cells, but that alterations in mucin antigens occur in a cell line-specific manner.