Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1935227 Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 2008 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryFucosylation is one of the most important oligosaccharide modifications and is involved in cancer and inflammation. Recently, fucosylated haptoglobin was identified as a possible tumor marker for pancreatic cancer. The molecular mechanism underlying increases in fucosylated haptoglobin in sera of patients with pancreatic cancer seems to be complicated. Our previous study [N. Okuyama, Y. Ide, M. Nakano, T. Nakagawa, K. Yamanaka, K. Moriwaki, K. Murata, H. Ohigashi, S. Yokoyama, H. Eguchi, O. Ishikawa, T. Ito, M. Kato, A. Kasahara, S. Kawano, J. Gu, N. Taniguchi, E. Miyoshi, Fucosylated haptoglobin is a novel marker for pancreatic cancer: a detailed analysis of the oligosaccharide structure and a possible mechanism for fucosylation, Int. J. Cancer 118 (11) (2006) 2803–2808] demonstrated that pancreatic cancer cells secrete a factor, which induces the production of haptoglobin in hepatoma cells. In the present study, we found that interleukin 6 (IL6) expressed in pancreatic cancer is a factor that induces the haptoglobin production, using a neutralizing antibody for IL6. Real-time PCR analyses revealed the up-regulation of fucosylation regulatory genes after IL6 treatment, resulting increases in fucosylated haptoglobin being revealed by a lectin ELISA. This pathway could be one of the possible mechanisms underlying increases in haptoglobin in sera of patients with pancreatic cancer.

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