Publication | Open Access
Breast Cancer Stem Cells Are Regulated by Mesenchymal Stem Cells through Cytokine Networks
608
Citations
26
References
2011
Year
The authors employed in vitro co‑culture and mouse xenograft models, complemented by immunohistochemistry, to identify MSC–CSC niches and study their interactions. Primitive ALDH+ mesenchymal cells regulate breast CSCs through IL6/CXCL7 cytokine loops, and bone marrow–derived MSCs accelerate tumor growth in NOD/SCID mice by expanding the CSC population, demonstrating that MSCs promote breast cancer via cytokine networks. Published in Cancer Research 71(2):614–624, ©2011 AACR.
Abstract We have used in vitro and mouse xenograft models to examine the interaction between breast cancer stem cells (CSC) and bone marrow–derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). We show that both of these cell populations are organized in a cellular hierarchy in which primitive aldehyde dehydrogenase expressing mesenchymal cells regulate breast CSCs through cytokine loops involving IL6 and CXCL7. In NOD/SCID mice, labeled MSCs introduced into the tibia traffic to sites of growing breast tumor xenografts where they accelerated tumor growth by increasing the breast CSC population. With immunochemistry, we identified MSC–CSC niches in these tumor xenografts as well as in frozen sections from primary human breast cancers. Bone marrow–derived MSCs may accelerate human breast tumor growth by generating cytokine networks that regulate the CSC population. Cancer Res; 71(2); 614–24. ©2011 AACR.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1