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A primary tumor promotes dormancy of solitary tumor cells before inhibiting angiogenesis.
Authors:M Guba  G Cernaianu  G Koehl  E K Geissler  K W Jauch  M Anthuber  W Falk  M Steinbauer
Institution:Department of Surgery, University of Regensburg, D-93042 Regensburg, Germany. markus.guba@klinik.uni-regensburg.de
Abstract:Mechanisms that regulate the transition of micrometastases from clinically undetectable and dormant to progressively growing are critically important but poorly understood in cancer biology. Here we examined the effect of a primary tumor on the growth of solitary tumor cells in the mouse liver, as well as on the development of tumor angiogenesis in a dorsal skin-fold chamber. s.c. placement of a CT-26 (BALB/c-derived mouse colon carcinoma) primary tumor markedly inhibited development of liver metastasis in BALB/c mice after subsequent intraportal injection of tumor cells. Dorsal skin-fold chamber experiments showed that this growth inhibition paralleled a strong antiangiogenic effect by the primary tumor. Furthermore, intravital microscopy of the liver after intraportal injection of green fluorescent protein-expressing tumor cells showed that primary tumors promoted dormancy of single tumor cells for up to 7 days. Immunohistological staining for Ki-67 confirmed that these solitary cells were indeed dormant. In contrast, in the absence of a primary tumor, GFP-expressing tumor cells quickly developed into micrometastases. Thus, primary CT-26 tumor implants nearly abrogated tumor metastasis by inhibition of angiogenesis and by promoting a state of single-cell dormancy. Knowledge of the mechanism underlying this dormancy state could result in the development of new therapeutic tools to fight cancer.
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