Literature DB >> 10395330

Mice deficient in tumor necrosis factor-alpha are resistant to skin carcinogenesis.

R J Moore1, D M Owens, G Stamp, C Arnott, F Burke, N East, H Holdsworth, L Turner, B Rollins, M Pasparakis, G Kollias, F Balkwill.   

Abstract

Given the associations between chronic inflammation and epithelial cancer, we studied susceptibility to skin carcinogenesis in mice deficient for the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-alpha (refs. 5,6). TNF-alpha(-/-) mice were resistant to development of benign and malignant skin tumors, whether induced by initiation with DMBA and promotion with TPA or by repeated dosing with DMBA. TNF-alpha(-/-) mice developed 5-10% the number of tumors developed by wild-type mice during initiation/promotion and 25% of those in wild-type mice after repeated carcinogen treatment. TNF-alpha could influence tumor and stromal cells during tumor development. The early stages of TPA promotion are characterized by keratinocyte hyperproliferation and inflammation. These were diminished in TNF-alpha(-/-) mice. TNF-alpha was extensively induced in the epidermis, but not the dermis, in TPA-treated wild-type skin, indicating that dermal inflammation is controlled by keratinocyte TNF-alpha production. Deletion of a TNF-alpha inducible chemokine also conferred some resistance to skin tumor development. TNF-alpha has little influence on later stages of carcinogenesis, as tumors in wild-type and TNF-alpha(-/-) mice had similar rates of malignant progression. These data provide evidence that a pro-inflammatory cytokine is required for de novo carcinogenesis and that TNF-alpha is important to the early stages of tumor promotion. Strategies that neutralize TNF-alpha production may be useful in cancer treatment and prevention.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10395330     DOI: 10.1038/10552

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Med        ISSN: 1078-8956            Impact factor:   53.440


  248 in total

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