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Macrophage Colony-stimulating Factor Gene Transduction into Human Lung Cancer Cells Differentially Regulates Metastasis Formations in Various Organ Microenvironments of Natural Killer Cell-depleted SCID Mice

Seiji Yano, Yasuhiko Nishioka, Hiroshi Nokihara and Saburo Sone
Seiji Yano
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Yasuhiko Nishioka
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Hiroshi Nokihara
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Saburo Sone
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DOI:  Published February 1997
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Abstract

We investigated whether local production of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), responsible for migration and activation of monocytes/macrophages at a tumor growth site, affected the metastatic pattern of lung cancer. For this, highly metastatic human squamous (RERF-LCAI) or small (H69/VP) cell lung carcinoma cells were transduced with the human M-CSF gene inserted into pRc/CMV-MCSF to establish M-CSF-producing clones (MCSF-AI-9-18, MCSF-AI-9-24, and MCSF-VP-5). M-CSF gene transduction had no effect on the expression of surface antigen or on in vitro proliferation. After s.c. injection into SCID mice, the growth rates of M-CSF-producing cells were slower than those of parent or mock-transduced cells. In the metastatic model in SCID mice depleted of natural killer cells, RERF-LC-AI cells formed metastases mainly in the liver and kidneys, whereas H69/VP cells metastasized mainly to the liver and systemic lymph nodes. The numbers of metastatic colonies of MCSF-AI-9-18 and MCSF-AI-9-24 cells in the liver but not the kidneys were significantly reduced. The development of lymph node metastases of MCSF-VP-5 cells was also less than that of parent or mock-transduced cells. Treatment of SCID mice with anti-human M-CSF antibody resulted in a significant increase in liver metastases of their M-CSF gene transfectants. No significant differences were observed in the distributions in mice or in the in vitro invasive potentials of MCSF-AI-9-18 cells and Neo-AI-3 cells. These findings indicate that the antimetastatic effect of M-CSF may be specific to particular organs, suggesting the influence of heterogeneity of organ microenvironments on the metastasis of lung cancer.

Footnotes

  • ↵1 Supported by a grant-in-aid for cancer research from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan.

  • ↵2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed.

  • Received September 18, 1996.
  • Accepted December 20, 1996.
  • ©1997 American Association for Cancer Research.
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February 1997
Volume 57, Issue 4
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Macrophage Colony-stimulating Factor Gene Transduction into Human Lung Cancer Cells Differentially Regulates Metastasis Formations in Various Organ Microenvironments of Natural Killer Cell-depleted SCID Mice
Seiji Yano, Yasuhiko Nishioka, Hiroshi Nokihara and Saburo Sone
Cancer Res February 15 1997 (57) (4) 784-790;

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Macrophage Colony-stimulating Factor Gene Transduction into Human Lung Cancer Cells Differentially Regulates Metastasis Formations in Various Organ Microenvironments of Natural Killer Cell-depleted SCID Mice
Seiji Yano, Yasuhiko Nishioka, Hiroshi Nokihara and Saburo Sone
Cancer Res February 15 1997 (57) (4) 784-790;
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