| Literature DB >> 29298428 |
Shanawaz Mohammed Ghouse1, Anastasia Polikarpova1, Lina Muhandes1, Jan Dudeck1, Iliana Tantcheva-Poór2, Karin Hartmann3, Matthias Lesche4, Andreas Dahl4, Sabine Eming2, Werner Müller5, Rayk Behrendt1, Axel Roers6.
Abstract
High numbers of mast cells populate the stroma of many types of neoplasms, including human papilloma virus-induced benign and malignant tumors in man and mouse. Equipped with numerous pattern recognition receptors and capable of executing important pro-inflammatory responses, mast cells are considered innate sentinels that significantly impact tumor biology. Mast cells were reported to promote human papilloma virus (HPV)-induced epithelial hyperproliferation and neo-angiogenesis in an HPV-driven mouse model of skin cancer. We analyzed HPV-induced epithelial hyperplasia and squamous cell carcinoma formation, as well as growth of tumors inoculated into the dermis, in mice lacking skin mast cells. Unexpectedly, the absence of mast cells had no effect on HPV-induced epithelial growth or angiogenesis, on growth kinetics of inoculated tumors, or on the immunological tumor micro-milieu. Thus, the conspicuous recruitment of mast cells into tumor tissues cannot necessarily be equated with important mast cell functions in tumor growth.Entities:
Keywords: HPV-induced skin cancer; mast cells; tumor angiogenesis; tumor micro-milieu
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29298428 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.12.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423