The effect of bone morphogenetic protein-2 on osteosarcoma metastasis.

PLoS One

Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and Blood & Marrow Cell Transplantation, Children's Hospital at Montefiore, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx New York, United States of America.

Published: August 2017

Purpose: Bone Morphogenetic Protein-2 (BMP-2) may offer the potential to enhance allograft-host osseous union in limb-salvage surgery following osteosarcoma resection. However, there is concern regarding the effect of locally applied BMP-2 on tumor recurrence and metastasis. The purpose of this project was to evaluate the effect of exogenous BMP-2 on osteosarcoma migration and invasion across a panel of tumor cell lines in vitro and to characterize the effect of BMP-2 on pulmonary osteosarcoma metastasis within a xenograft model.

Experimental Design: The effect of BMP-2 on in vitro tumor growth and development was assessed across multiple standard and patient-derived xenograft osteosarcoma cell lines. Tumor migration capacity, invasion, and cell proliferation were characterized. In addition, the effect on metastasis was measured using a xenograft model following tail-vein injection. The effect of exogenous BMP-2 on the development of metastases was measured following both single and multiple BMP-2 administrations.

Results: There was no significant difference in migration capacity, invasion, or cell proliferation between the BMP-2 treated and the untreated osteosarcoma cell lines. There was no significant difference in pulmonary metastases between either the single-dose or multi-dose BMP-2 treated animals and the untreated control animals.

Conclusions: In the model systems tested, the addition of BMP-2 does not increase osteosarcoma proliferation, migration, invasion, or metastasis to the lungs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5338793PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0173322PLOS

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