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Organ specificity of metastatic tumor colonization is related to organ‐selective growth properties of malignant cells
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Citations
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References
1986
Year
Organ SpecificityMalignant DiseaseGrowth RateMedicineImmunologyTumor SpreadPathologyCancer Cell BiologyCell ProliferationMalignant MelanomaOrgan‐selective Growth PropertiesCancer BiologyCell BiologyCancer ResearchTumor BiologyCancer GrowthMalignanciesMetastatic Tumor Colonization
Malignant melanoma metastasizes preferentially to specific organs. The study used B16 melanoma sublines selected for lung, brain, or ovary colonization and examined their in vitro growth response to soluble factors from mouse lung, brain, liver, ovary, and kidney tissues. Lung‑colonizing B16 cells were most strongly stimulated by lung‑derived factors, ovary‑colonizing cells responded to ovary or lung factors, brain‑colonizing cells showed no stimulation by brain factors, and liver or high‑concentration kidney factors inhibited growth, indicating that organ‑specific soluble factors influence metastatic colonization.
In cancers such as malignant melanoma, tumor spread or metastasis occurs preferentially to certain organ sites. Mouse B16 melanoma cell sublines that have been selected sequentially in vivo for enhanced blood-borne colonization of lung, brain, or ovary were tested for their survival and growth stimulation in vitro by soluble factors released from suspensions of mouse lung, brain, liver, ovary or kidney tissues. In general, the growth rate of lung-colonizing B16 cells was stimulated by high concentrations of lung-tissue-derived factors significantly more than by factors from the other tissues, whereas the growth rate of ovary-colonizing B16 cells was stimulated by ovary or lung-tissue-derived factors significantly more than by factors from the other tissues. In contrast, the growth of brain-colonizing B16 cells was not stimulated by factors released from brain tissue. When it occurred, stimulation of B16 cell growth by factors released from mouse organ tissues was dose-dependent. Liver tissue factors, and at high concentrations kidney tissue factors, inhibited cell growth of the B16 sublines, an inhibition correlating with the low potential of B16 cells to colonize liver and kidney in vivo. In addition to preferential target-organ cell adhesion found previously with B16 sublines (Nicolson et al., 1985a), the present results suggest that metastasis to specific organ sites is also dependent on the survival and growth of B16 cells affected by soluble organ-derived factors.
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