| Literature DB >> 27565343 |
Liqin Zhu1, David Finkelstein2, Culian Gao3, Lei Shi3, Yongdong Wang2, Dolores López-Terrada4, Kasper Wang5, Sarah Utley5, Stanley Pounds3, Geoffrey Neale6, David Ellison7, Arzu Onar-Thomas8, Richard James Gilbertson9.
Abstract
Cancers are distributed unevenly across the body, but the importance of cell intrinsic factors such as stem cell function in determining organ cancer risk is unknown. Therefore, we used Cre-recombination of conditional lineage tracing, oncogene, and tumor suppressor alleles to define populations of stem and non-stem cells in mouse organs and test their life-long susceptibility to tumorigenesis. We show that tumor incidence is determined by the life-long generative capacity of mutated cells. This relationship held true in the presence of multiple genotypes and regardless of developmental stage, strongly supporting the notion that stem cells dictate organ cancer risk. Using the liver as a model system, we further show that damage-induced activation of stem cell function markedly increases cancer risk. Therefore, we propose that a combination of stem cell mutagenesis and extrinsic factors that enhance the proliferation of these cell populations, creates a "perfect storm" that ultimately determines organ cancer risk. VIDEO ABSTRACT.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27565343 PMCID: PMC5067024 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2016.07.045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582