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- Dahlman, Thèrése, et al.
(author)
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Collagen type I expression in experimental anaplastic thyroid carcinoma : regulation and relevance for tumorigenicity
- 2002
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In: International Journal of Cancer. - : Wiley. - 0020-7136 .- 1097-0215. ; 98:2, s. 186-192
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Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
- Fibrosis in solid malignancies plays a significant role in tumor pathophysiology. Potential mechanisms for collagen type I deposition in anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) were investigated using 6 characterized ATC cell lines. Three of these cell lines, which produced collagen type I, had, as a group, a poor tumorigenicity when inoculated in athymic mice. This group of cells generated tumors in 4 of 24 injected animals (17%). Pro-alpha 1(I) collagen mRNA-expressing carcinoma and stromal cells were interdispersed in the tumors generated by these ATC cells. By contrast, the 3 noncollagen-producing ATC cell lines were all tumorigenic with a tumor take of 60% in the whole group. In the latter tumors, pro-alpha 1(I) collagen mRNA-expressing cells were confined to the stromal compartment, well delineated from carcinoma cell islets. To study the influence of ATC cells on collagen type I synthesis by fibroblasts, we used AG 1518 diploid human fibroblasts cultured on poly-(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (poly[HEMA])-coated plates. This culture condition allows the study of the effect of collagen mRNA translation in the regulation of collagen type I synthesis. Conditioned media from the 6 ATC cell lines did not influence collagen synthesis. The ATC cell line KAT-4 stimulated fibroblast synthesis of collagen type I when the two cell types were cocultured on poly[HEMA]-coated substrates. Specific inhibitors of PDGF and TGF-beta reduced the KAT 4 carcinoma cell-induced stimulation of collagen type I synthesis. Our data suggest that collagen type I production by carcinoma cells correlates negatively with tumorigenicity and that the formation of a well-defined stroma is of importance for tumor growth. Furthermore, our data suggest that tumor cells are able to stimulate collagen mRNA translation in stromal fibroblasts in direct cell-cell contact by, at least in part, transferring PDGF or TGF-beta.
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- Jacobson, Annica, et al.
(author)
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Hyaluronan content in experimental carcinoma is not correlated to interstitial fluid pressure.
- 2003
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In: Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.. ; 305, s. 1017-1023
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Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
- Mechanism(s) for generation of the high tumor interstitial fluid pressure (TIFP) that is characteristic of carcinoma is not known. We investigated the role of hyaluronan, the major water-binding polysaccharide of the extracellular matrix, for the generation of a high TIFP. A human anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (KAT-4) xenografted to athymic mice and a syngeneic rat colon carcinoma (PROb) were used. Neither KAT-4 nor PROb cells produced hyaluronan (HA) in culture, however, both cell lines produced factors that stimulated HA-synthesis by cultured fibroblasts. Modulating hyaluronan levels by transfection of PROb carcinoma cells with hyaluronan synthase-2 revealed no correlation between hyaluronan content and TIFP. Furthermore, lowering of TIFP by treating KAT-4 tumors with a specific inhibitor of TGF-beta 1 and -beta 3 did not change the concentration of hyaluronan in the tumors. In summary, our results suggest that a modulation of hyaluronan content is not a major pathogenetic mechanism for the generation of the characteristically high TIFP in malignant carcinomas.
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- Lammerts, Ellen, 1968-
(author)
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Tumor Stroma in Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma : Interstitial Collagen and Tumor Interstitial Fluid Pressure
- 2001
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Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
- Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is an aggressive malignancy in man with stromal fibrosis as one of the main features. Carcinoma cells synthesized no or little collagen I protein. Pro-α1(I) collagen mRNA was expressed by stromal cells throughout the tumor, but expression of procollagen type I protein was restricted to stromal cells situated close to nests of carcinoma cells. These data suggest that the carcinoma cells stimulated collagen type I deposition by increasing pro-α1(1) collagen mRNA translation. Cocultures, of the human ATC cell line KAT-4, with fibroblasts under conditions that allow the study of stimulatory factors on collagen mRNA translation, showed that the KAT-4 cells stimulated collagen type I protein synthesis in fibroblasts. Specific inhibitors of PDGF and TGF-β1 and -β3 were able to inhibit this carcinoma cell-induced stimulation of collagen type I synthesis. These findings suggest that tumor cells were able to stimulate collagen mRNA translation in stromal fibroblasts by, at least in part, transferring PDGF and/or TGF-β1 and -β3.Xenograft transplantation of different ATC cell lines into athymic mice demonstrated that the low collagen producing carcinoma cell lines were less tumorigenic compared to non-collagen producing carcinoma cell lines. The morphology of tumors derived from non-collagen producing ATC cell lines showed a well demarked stroma surrounding carcinoma cell nests. TGF-β1 and -β3 were found to play a role in generating a high tumor interstitial fluid pressure (TIPF) in experimental KAT-4 tumors. A specific inhibitor of TGF-β1 and -β3 was able to lower TIPF and reduce tumor growth after a prolonged period of treatment, suggesting that TGF-β1 and -β3 have a role in maintaining a stroma that support tumor growth.
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