Synthesis and secretion of α2-macroglobulin by human glioma established cell lines

Abstract
Human α2-macroglobulin (α2M) is a high molecular weight plasma proteinase inhibitor exhibiting a broad specificity; in fact it is capable of binding endopeptidases from all known classes of proteases (Barret 1981). Two human glioma cell lines, namely an astrocytoma and a glioblastoma, were found to synthesize and secrete in the culture medium a protein which resembles the serum α2M for immunological, biochemical and biological features. Using polyclonal antibodies to serum α2M, an α2M-like factor could be detected in the cytoplasm and in the culture medium of the tumor cells. Furthermore this factor accumulated in cytoplasmic granules if cells were incubated with monensin and its production was dramatically reduced following a treatment with cycloheximide. This protein behaved like the serum α2M in immunoblotting analysis and exhibited the same antiproteolytic activity. Its role in human brain is unknown at present. Since interactions of proteinases and proteinase-inhibitors appear to influence the hosttumor immune response and to play a crucial role during the migration of metastasizing tumor cells, α2M expression observed in these glioma cells could be involved in tumor cell proliferation and invasion.