Malignant transformation of cells causes disruption of cell-cell adhesion, enhancement of cell motility, and invasion into surrounding tissues. Nectins have both homophilic and heterophilic cell-cell adhesion activities and organize adherens junctions in cooperation with cadherins. We examined here whether Tage4, which was originally identified to be a gene overexpressed in colon carcinoma and has a domain structure similar to those of nectins, is involved in cell adhesion and/or migration. Tage4 heterophilically trans-interacted with nectin-3, but not homophilically with Tage4. Expression of Tage4 was markedly elevated in NIH3T3 cells transformed by an oncogenic Ki-Ras (V12Ras-NIH3T3 cells) as compared with that of wild-type NIH3T3 cells. trans-Interaction of Tage4 with nectin-3 enhanced motility of V12Ras-NIH3T3 cells. Tage4 did not bind afadin, a nectin- and actin filament-binding protein that connects nectins to the actin cytoskeleton and cadherins through catenins. Thus, Tage4 heterophilically trans-interacts with nectin-3 and regulates cell migration. Tage4 is tentatively re-named here nectin-like molecule-5 (necl-5) on the basis of its function and domain structure similar to those of nectins.