Direct and indirect contribution of bone marrow-derived cells to cancer
✍ Scribed by Ian Guest; Zoran Ilic; Jun Ma; Denise Grant; Gennadi Glinsky; Stewart Sell
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 875 KB
- Volume
- 126
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Stromal‐epithelial interactions may control the growth and initiation of cancers. Here, we not only test the hypothesis that bone marrow‐derived cells may effect development of cancers arising from other tissue cells by forming tumor stroma but also that sarcomas may arise by transformation of stem cells from the bone marrow and epithelial cancers may arise by transdifferentiation of bone marrow stem cells to epithelial cancers. Lethally irradiated female FVB/N mice were restored with bone marrow (BM) transplants from a male transgenic mouse carrying the polyoma middle T‐oncoprotein under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter (MMTV‐PyMT) and followed for development of lesions. All of 8 lethally irradiated female FVB/N recipient mice, restored with BM transplants from a male MMTV‐PyMT transgenic mouse, developed Y‐chromosome negative (Y−) cancers of various organs surrounded by Y+ stroma. One of the female FVB/N recipient mice also developed fibrosarcoma and 1, a diploid breast adenocarcinoma containing Y chromosomes. In contrast, only 1 of 12 control female mice restored with normal male BM developed a tumor (lymphoma) during the same time period. These results indicate not only that the transgenic BM‐derived stromal cells may indirectly contribute to development of tumors in recipient mice but also that sarcomas may arise by transformation of BM stem cells and that breast cancers arise by transdifferentiation of BM stem cells, presumably by mesenchymal‐epithelial transition.
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