Literature DB >> 25693490

Fetal Microchimerism in Cancer Protection and Promotion: Current Understanding in Dogs and the Implications for Human Health.

Jeffrey N Bryan1.   

Abstract

Fetal microchimerism is the co-existence of small numbers of cells from genetically distinct individuals living within a mother's body following pregnancy. During pregnancy, bi-directional exchange of cells occurs resulting in maternal microchimerism and even sibling microchimerism in offspring. The presence of fetal microchimerism has been identified with lower frequency in patients with cancers such as breast and lymphoma and with higher frequency in patients with colon cancer and autoimmune diseases. Microchimeric cells have been identified in healing and healed tissues as well as normal and tumor tissues. This has led to the hypothesis that fetal microchimerism may play a protective role in some cancers and may provoke other cancers or autoimmune disease. The long periods of risk for these diseases make it a challenge to prospectively study this phenomenon in human populations. Dogs get similar cancers as humans, share our homes and environmental exposures, and live compressed life-spans, allowing easier prospective study of disease development. This review describes the current state of understanding of fetal microchimerism in humans and dogs and highlights the similarities of the common cancers mammary carcinoma, lymphoma, and colon cancer between the two species. Study of fetal microchimerism in dogs might hold the key to characterization of the type and function of microchimeric cells and their role in health and disease. Such an understanding could then be applied to preventing and treating disease in humans.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25693490      PMCID: PMC4406952          DOI: 10.1208/s12248-015-9731-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AAPS J        ISSN: 1550-7416            Impact factor:   4.009


  62 in total

Review 1.  Lymphoid malignancies: the dark side of B-cell differentiation.

Authors:  A L Shaffer; Andreas Rosenwald; Louis M Staudt
Journal:  Nat Rev Immunol       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 53.106

2.  Fetal microchimerism in breast from women with and without breast cancer.

Authors:  Vijayakrishna K Gadi
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2009-09-19       Impact factor: 4.872

3.  Microchimerism and tolerance following intrauterine transplantation and transfusion for alpha-thalassemia-1.

Authors:  A Hayward; D Ambruso; F Battaglia; T Donlon; K Eddelman; R Giller; J Hobbins; Y E Hsia; R Quinones; E Shpall; E Trachtenberg; P Giardina
Journal:  Fetal Diagn Ther       Date:  1998 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.587

4.  The occurrence of tumors in domestic animals.

Authors:  W A Priester; F W McKay
Journal:  Natl Cancer Inst Monogr       Date:  1980-11

5.  Thyroid fetal male microchimerisms in mothers with thyroid disorders: presence of Y-chromosomal immunofluorescence in thyroid-infiltrating lymphocytes is more prevalent in Hashimoto's thyroiditis and Graves' disease than in follicular adenomas.

Authors:  Christoph Renné; Elizabeth Ramos Lopez; Susanne A Steimle-Grauer; Piotr Ziolkowski; Michael A Pani; Christina Luther; Katharina Holzer; Albrecht Encke; Robert A Wahl; Wolf O Bechstein; Klaus H Usadel; Martin-Leo Hansmann; Klaus Badenhoop
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2004-11       Impact factor: 5.958

6.  Canine indolent nodular lymphoma.

Authors:  V E Valli; W Vernau; L-P de Lorimier; P S Graham; P F Moore
Journal:  Vet Pathol       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 2.221

7.  Inflammatory mammary carcinoma in dogs: 33 cases (1995-1999).

Authors:  M D Pérez Alenza; E Tabanera; L Peña
Journal:  J Am Vet Med Assoc       Date:  2001-10-15       Impact factor: 1.936

8.  Canine lymphomas: association of classification type, disease stage, tumor subtype, mitotic rate, and treatment with survival.

Authors:  V E Valli; P H Kass; M San Myint; F Scott
Journal:  Vet Pathol       Date:  2013-02-26       Impact factor: 2.221

Review 9.  Spontaneous and genetically engineered animal models; use in preclinical cancer drug development.

Authors:  K Hansen; C Khanna
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 9.162

10.  Chromosome aberrations in canine multicentric lymphomas detected with comparative genomic hybridisation and a panel of single locus probes.

Authors:  R Thomas; K C Smith; E A Ostrander; F Galibert; M Breen
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2003-10-20       Impact factor: 7.640

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