AI Article Synopsis

  • Yoshida sarcoma (YS) presents as free-floating cells in ascites, while long-survival variants (LY) form distinct "islands" after transplant into immunocompromised rats.
  • A study identified 15 gene expression differences between YS and LY variants, with specific genes showing high expression in YS and lower to non-existent levels in LYs, including markers related to immune response and epithelial cell-specific genes.
  • Findings reveal unique cellular origins for YS and LY variants, raising questions about their development rather than providing a clear mechanism for the long-survival phenotype.

Article Abstract

The Yoshida sarcoma (YS) is characterized by growth as "free cells" in ascites. Long-survival Yoshida sarcoma (LY) variants, which develop after transplantation of YS into immunologically conditioned Donryu rats, in contrast, form "islands" in ascites. A representational difference analysis (RDA) approach was adopted to isolate genes differentially expressed between YS and LY variants to elucidate the molecular mechanism of their development. Fifteen clones presenting differences in expression were characterized. Nine genes (those encoding for the high-affinity IgE receptor gamma chain, pJG116 repetitive sequence, non neuronal enolase, proteasome subunit RC1, cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated gene transcript CTLA-1, interleukin-2 receptor gamma chain, and three unknown sequences) expressed mRNA in YS, but showed lower or no expression of mRNA in LYs. The mRNAs of the other six genes (those encoding for cytokeratin 8, cytokeratin18 (Endo B), TIMP2 and three unknown sequences) were not found in YS, but were present in LYs. Interestingly, CTLA-1 is a non-epithelial (hematopoietic) cell-specific gene in terms of transcription, while cytokeratin 8 and cytokeratin 18 are both epithelium-specific genes. Immunohistochemically, YS expressed T-cell specific antigens CD2 and CD3, and T cell receptor beta and gamma chain genes were rearranged in YS, but not in LYs. Moreover, using restriction fragment length polymorphism probes, we found that LYs exhibited different cell lineage from YS. Thus, our present findings, unexpectedly, raise fundamental questions concerning the cellular origins of YS and LY variants rather than pointing to any specific mechanism to explain the LY phenomenon.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5919363PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.1994.tb02913.xDOI Listing

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