| Literature DB >> 18535198 |
Julia Kirshner1, Kyle J Thulien, Lorri D Martin, Carina Debes Marun, Tony Reiman, Andrew R Belch, Linda M Pilarski.
Abstract
Although the in vitro expansion of the multiple myeloma (MM) clone has been unsuccessful, in a novel three-dimensional (3-D) culture model of reconstructed bone marrow (BM, n = 48) and mobilized blood autografts (n = 14) presented here, the entire MM clone proliferates and undergoes up to 17-fold expansion of malignant cells harboring the clonotypic IgH VDJ and characteristic chromosomal rearrangements. In this system, MM clone expands in a reconstructed microenvironment that is ideally suited for testing specificity of anti-MM therapeutics. In the 3-D model, melphalan and bortezomib had distinct targets, with melphalan targeting the hematopoietic, but not stromal com-partment. Bortezomib targeted only CD138(+)CD56(+) MM plasma cells. The localization of nonproliferating cells to the reconstructed endosteum, in contact with N-cadherin-positive stroma, suggested the presence of MM-cancer stem cells. These drug-resistant CD20(+) cells were enriched more than 10-fold by melphalan treatment, exhibited self-renewal, and generated clonotypic B and plasma cell progeny in colony forming unit assays. This is the first molecularly verified demonstration of proliferation in vitro by ex vivo MM cells. The 3-D culture provides a novel biologically relevant preclinical model for evaluating therapeutic vulnerabilities of all compartments of the MM clone, including presumptive drug-resistant MM stem cells.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18535198 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2008-02-142430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113