The expression of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA), its receptor (u-PAR) and metalloproteases activity were analyzed in 4 human gastric-cancer cell lines (AGS, Hs746T, SNU-1, and SNU-5), in an attempt to relate these activities to their invasive potential and tumorigenicity on the modified chorioallantoic membranes (CAM) of chick embryos. Only 1 of the 4 cell lines tested, Hs746T, expressed both u-PA and u-PAR as well as MMP-2, but not MMP-9. This cell line was both tumorigenic and highly invasive (51.3 +/- 13.1%) on a modified CAM. Its invasive capacity was comparable with that of a highly malignant human epidermoid-carcinoma cell line (HEp3), which usually showed 40 to 50% invasiveness. The 3 other cell lines all produced MMP-2 and MMP-9, but only AGS showed moderate invasiveness (24.2 +/- 8.8%). While antibodies to u-PA were significantly effective in reducing CAM invasiveness of Hs746T cells by approximately 40%, the invasiveness of the t-PA-expressing AGS cell line was not affected by anti-t-PA antibodies. These results suggest that when one of the components of the u-PA/u-PAR system (the enzyme and/or the receptor) is not produced and u-PA/u-PAR-dependent cell-surface proteolytic activity is thereby diminished, the malignant phenotype that can be determined by tumorigenicity and invasion of connective tissue on a CAM is compromised. Production of both type-IV collagenases (MMP-2 and MMP-9) cannot offset this deficiency.