| Literature DB >> 20974685 |
Dexuan Ma1, Minmin Zhang, Luping Chen, Qisheng Tang, Xuqun Tang, Ying Mao, Liangfu Zhou.
Abstract
The cytological origin of central nervous system hemangioblastoma (HB) remains unclear and controversial, largely owing to a lack of in-depth characterization of tumorigenic cells and their progeny tracking. We have now detected a cell subpopulation by stage-specific embryonic antigen-1 expression, which were defined as tumor-initiating cells (TICs) in both sporadic and familial HBs. These TICs subpopulations had universal neural stem cell characteristics. Nevertheless, the freshly sorted TICs endowed with potential of multi-progeny derivatives, including HB components and non-HB ingredients, depended on environmental induction in vitro. Importantly, the freshly harvested TICs formed malignant tumors by injection into conventional mice model, while did redevelop the characteristic HB-like structures within a special mice model with HB-microenvironment, indicating HB niche dependency for the TICs derivative specification. Taken together, the data of the present study suggested that HBs might derive from neoplastic transformation of neural stem cells/progenitors in the specific niche.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20974685 DOI: 10.1093/carcin/bgq214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carcinogenesis ISSN: 0143-3334 Impact factor: 4.944