Literature DB >> 12100626

Anaplastic neoplasms arising from basal cellcarcinoma xenotransplants into SCID-beige mice.

J Andrew Carlson1, Nicholas J Combates, Kurt S Stenn, Stephen M Prouty.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An animal model for the study of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is required to better understand its biology. Several attempts to grow BCC in immuno-incompetent animals have been only modestly successful.
METHODS: To test the ability of BCC to grow in a mouse with complete and severe immuno-incompetence, 14 individual BCC were transplanted into the subcutaneous tissue of 18 SCID-beige mice (T, B and natural killer cell deficient). Light microscopy and immunophenotypic analyses were performed on primary BCC and first and seventh passage tumors.
RESULTS: Transplantation of three BCC yielded rapidly growing anaplastic tumors for a tumor take of 18% (3/18). SCID-beige mice without tumor growth had mostly scars or epidermoid cysts at the transplant sites. The three patients whose BCC gave rise to the anaplastic tumors were significantly older than those without tumor growth (87 vs. 64, p = 0.001), but they did not differ with respect to BCC type or general health. These three anaplastic tumors were histologically and immunophenotypically similar, being composed of dyscohesive, pleomorphic cells that expressed vimentin and smooth muscle actin. In the first passage mice these tumors were locally invasive, tumor-forming nodules associated with an expansion of donor inflammatory cells (T and B lymphocytes and plasma cells), rare remnants of BCC epithelium and epidermoid cysts. By the seventh passage, the tumors were homogenous and metastasized widely throughout the mice. Changing transplantation location to the dermis to wound environment or supplementing the tumor with BCC-derived fibroblasts did not alter the phenotype or growth rate in SCID-beige mice. Anaplastic tumors also grew easily in SCID mice (T and B cell deficient). However, transplantation of the anaplastic tumors into normal mice (CB-17) or less severely immunodeficient mice (NCr and Balb/c: T and natural killer cell deficient) did not allow for growth. Furthermore, tumor growth could not be maintained in vitro.
CONCLUSION: Empirically, these data suggest that BCC has the potential to become an aggressive metastatic neoplasm, given the right immune and stromal environment. Moreover, a functional B lymphocyte system appears to prevent this growth. As human lymphocytes also engraft in SCID-beige mice, the original host immune response could be responsible for the lack of tumor growth in the majority of xenografts. Furthermore, the anaplastic and metastatic phenotype of these BCC derived neoplasms may be the experimental equivalent of metastatic BCC and BCC associated with carcinosarcoma.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12100626     DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0560.2002.290502.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cutan Pathol        ISSN: 0303-6987            Impact factor:   1.587


  4 in total

1.  Tumor site immune markers associated with risk for subsequent basal cell carcinomas.

Authors:  Ronald Glaser; Rebecca Andridge; Eric V Yang; Arwa Y Shana'ah; Michael Di Gregorio; Min Chen; Sheri L Johnson; Lawrence A De Renne; David R Lambert; Scott D Jewell; Mark A Bechtel; Dean W Hearne; Joel Bain Herron; Janice K Kiecolt-Glaser
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-09-29       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Establishment of murine basal cell carcinoma allografts: a potential model for preclinical drug testing and for molecular analysis.

Authors:  Grace Ying Wang; Po-Lin So; Lynn Wang; Eileen Libove; Joy Wang; Ervin H Epstein
Journal:  J Invest Dermatol       Date:  2011-08-11       Impact factor: 8.551

3.  Morphometric characteristics of basal cell carcinoma peritumoral stroma varies among basal cell carcinoma subtypes.

Authors:  Kyle Lesack; Christopher Naugler
Journal:  BMC Dermatol       Date:  2012-03-09

4.  An Unexpected Transformation: Malignant Spindle Cell Carcinoma Developed From Primary Basal Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  Erinie Mekheal; Sindhusha Veeraballi; Brooke E Kania; Leena Bondili; Michael Maroules
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2022-07-07
  4 in total

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