PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - ULRICH H. WEIDLE AU - DANIELA EGGLE AU - STEFAN KLOSTERMANN AU - GUIDO W.M. SWART TI - ALCAM/CD166: Cancer-related Issues DP - 2010 Sep 01 TA - Cancer Genomics - Proteomics PG - 231--243 VI - 7 IP - 5 4099 - http://cgp.iiarjournals.org/content/7/5/231.short 4100 - http://cgp.iiarjournals.org/content/7/5/231.full SO - Cancer Genomics Proteomics2010 Sep 01; 7 AB - Activated leucocyte adhesion molecule (ALCAM) was originally identified as a transmembrane receptor which is involved in T-cell activation and has other still unresolved functions in hematopoiesis, development, inflammation and transendothelial migration of neutrophils. ALCAM is a member of a subfamily of immunoglobulin receptors with five immunoglobulin-like domains (VVC2C2C2) in the extracellular domain and is expressed in many types of tumors. The tumor-type-dependent impact of its expression level with respect to prognosis points to a possible context-dependent function. Most functional investigations have focused on malignant melanoma, in which high ALCAM expression at the protein level correlates with a poor prognosis. ALCAM mediates low-affinity homophilic interactions and much stronger interactions with CD6. Modulation of ALCAM function with agents such as transfected dominant negative ALCAM and ligand-binding secreted ALCAM both lead to inhibition of matrix metalloproteinase-2 activation, but their impact with respect to invasion in vitro and metastasis in vivo are different. Single-chain Fv fragments directed against ALCAM are efficiently internalized, paving the way for exploration of immunoconjugates as therapeutic agents. Validation experiments of the target with modulatory agents for possible therapeutic application in oncology are discussed.