Stromal modulation of bladder cancer-initiating cells in a subcutaneous tumor model.

Am J Cancer Res

UCLA Department of Urology Los Angeles, California ; Eli & Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine & Stem Cell Research, UCLA Los Angeles, California ; Molecular Biology Institute at UCLA Los Angeles, California.

Published: December 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study presents a new method for developing bladder cancer models by combining human fetal bladder stromal cells with SW780 carcinoma cells, mimicking human tumor architecture.
  • These engineered tumors demonstrate enhanced growth and similarity to malignant bladder structures when fetal stromal cells are present, highlighting the importance of the tumor microenvironment.
  • This approach may aid in understanding tumor behavior and serve as a platform for testing new cancer treatments.

Article Abstract

The development of new cancer therapeutics would benefit from incorporating efficient tumor models that mimic human disease. We have developed a subcutaneous bladder tumor regeneration system that recapitulates primary human bladder tumor architecture by recombining benign human fetal bladder stromal cells with SW780 bladder carcinoma cells. As a first step, SW780 cells were seeded in ultra low attachment cultures in order to select for sphere-forming cells, the putative cancer stem cell (CSC) phenotype. Spheroids were combined with primary human fetal stromal cells or vehicle control and injected subcutaneously with Matrigel into NSG mice. SW780 bladder tumors that formed in the presence of stroma showed accelerated growth, muscle invasion, epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), decreased differentiation, and greater activation of growth pathways compared to tumors formed in the absence of fetal stroma. Tumors grown with stroma also demonstrated a greater similarity to typical malignant bladder architecture, including the formation of papillary structures. In an effort to determine if cancer cells from primary tumors could form similar structures in vivo using this recombinatorial approach, putative CSCs, sorted based on the CD44(+)CD49f(+) antigenic profile, were collected and recombined with fetal bladder stromal cells and Matrigel prior to subcutaneous implantation. Retrieved grafts contained tumors that exhibited the same structure as the original primary human tumor. Primary bladder tumor regeneration using human fetal bladder stroma may help elucidate the influences of stroma on tumor growth and development, as well as provide an efficient and accessible system for therapeutic testing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3512189PMC

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