Cell surface receptors for laminin may play an important role in tumor migration and metastasis. To evaluate laminin receptor/laminin-binding protein expression in human colon carcinoma, surgical specimens of primary colon cancers and liver metastases were examined by blot hybridization of total RNA with a complementary DNA clone which encodes a Mr 32,000 human laminin-binding protein. The mRNA level of the laminin-binding protein was higher in primary colon carcinoma than in adjacent normal colonic epithelium in 20 of 21 cases. In all 6 cases of colon cancer liver metastases, the laminin-binding protein mRNA level was more than 3-fold greater in tumor than in adjacent normal liver tissue. The tumor/normal ratio of this laminin-binding protein mRNA expression in primary colon cancer has significant correlation with Dukes' classification (P less than 0.001). Our results suggest that mRNA expression of the laminin-binding protein may be a marker of human colorectal cancer progression and biological aggressiveness.