Characterization of CD44 splicing patterns in normal keratinocytes, dysplastic and squamous carcinoma cell lines.

B. K. Bloor, M. Jelvagharan, K. N. White, E. W. Odell

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The CD44 glycoprotein is spliced from a complex gene of 10 constitutive and 10 variant exons. In this study, CD44 splicing patterns and intron 9 retention were investigated by exon-specific RT-PCR for variant exons v1-v10 and intron 9 in normal, immortalized, dysplastic and malignant keratinocytes. Expression of product was determined immunohistochemically for some of the exons. Normal keratinocytes showed one major transcript including exons v2-v10 and 3 minor transcripts. No lines showed a normal CD44 splicing pattern but rather a variety of truncated transcripts of contiguous variant exons which overall correlated with expression. Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC)-4 and SCC-9 lines showed relatively normal transcripts although protein was expressed only by SCC-9. SCC-12B2, SCC-15, SCC-25 and SCC-27 showed a series of shorter overlapping transcripts, with loss of exons v8-v10 in the major transcripts. Intron 9 was not retained in normal keratinocytes or cell lines. Despite the fact that keratinocytes constitutively express all variant exons, splicing patterns are distinctly abnormal and merit investigation as potential markers for epidermal and oral squamous malignancy.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1053-1059
    Number of pages6
    JournalInternational Journal of Oncology
    Volume18
    Issue number5
    Publication statusPublished - May 2001

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