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https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.3127
Title: | Macrophage depletion reduces postsurgical tumor recurrence and metastatic growth in a spontaneous murine model of melanoma | Authors: | Tham, M Khoo, K Yeo, K.P Kato, M Prevost-Blondel, A Angeli, V Abastado, J.-P |
Keywords: | antineoplastic agent ki 20227 unclassified drug protein Ret RET protein, human animal cell animal experiment animal model animal tissue Article cancer growth cancer recurrence cancer surgery cell density cell function cell population cell proliferation controlled study distant metastasis drug efficacy eye melanoma eye surgery female in vitro study macrophage male melanoma melanoma cell line metastatic melanoma mouse nonhuman postoperative period animal cell growth disease model genetics human macrophage Melanoma, Experimental metabolism pathology physiology prevention and control procedures transgenic mouse tumor cell line tumor recurrence Animals Cell Growth Processes Cell Line, Tumor Disease Models, Animal Female Humans Macrophages Male Melanoma, Experimental Mice Mice, Transgenic Neoplasm Recurrence, Local Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-ret Surgical Procedures, Operative |
Issue Date: | 2015 | Citation: | Tham, M, Khoo, K, Yeo, K.P, Kato, M, Prevost-Blondel, A, Angeli, V, Abastado, J.-P (2015). Macrophage depletion reduces postsurgical tumor recurrence and metastatic growth in a spontaneous murine model of melanoma. Oncotarget 6 (26) : 22857-22868. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.3127 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International | Abstract: | Surgical resection of tumors is often followed by regrowth at the primary site and metastases may emerge rapidly following removal of the primary tumor. Macrophages are important drivers of tumor growth, and here we investigated their involvement in postoperative relapse as well as explore macrophage depletion as an adjuvant to surgical resection. RETAAD mice develop spontaneous metastatic melanoma that begins in the eye. Removal of the eyes as early as 1 week of age did not prevent the development of metastases; rather, surgery led to increased proliferation of tumor cells locally and in distant metastases. Surgery-induced increase in tumor cell proliferation correlated with increased macrophage density within the tumor. Moreover, macrophages stimulate tumor sphere formation from tumor cells of postsurgical but not control mice. Macrophage depletion with a diet containing the CSF-1R specific kinase inhibitor Ki20227 following surgery significantly reduced postoperative tumor recurrence and abrogated enhanced metastatic outgrowth. Our results confirm that tumor cells disseminate early, and show that macrophages contribute both to post-surgical tumor relapse and growth of metastases, likely through stimulating a population of tumor-initiating cells. Thus macrophage depletion warrants exploration as an adjuvant to surgical resection. | Source Title: | Oncotarget | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/180950 | ISSN: | 19492553 | DOI: | 10.18632/oncotarget.3127 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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