Kelly Priscilla N, Dakic Aleksandar, Adams Jerry M, Nutt Stephen L, Strasser Andreas
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne 3050, Australia.
Science. 2007 Jul 20;317(5836):337. doi: 10.1126/science.1142596.
The cancer stem cell hypothesis postulates that tumor growth is driven by a rare subpopulation of tumor cells. Much of the supporting evidence for this intriguing idea is derived from xenotransplantation experiments in which human leukemia cells are grown in immunocompromised mice. We show that, when lymphomas and leukemias of mouse origin are transplanted into histocompatible mice, a very high frequency (at least 1 in 10) of the tumor cells can seed tumor growth. We suggest that the low frequency of tumor-sustaining cells observed in xenotransplantation studies may reflect the limited ability of human tumor cells to adapt to growth in a foreign (mouse) milieu.
癌症干细胞假说假定肿瘤生长是由肿瘤细胞中的一个罕见亚群驱动的。这一有趣观点的许多支持证据都来自异种移植实验,即把人类白血病细胞植入免疫功能低下的小鼠体内。我们发现,当将源自小鼠的淋巴瘤和白血病移植到组织相容性小鼠体内时,很高比例(至少十分之一)的肿瘤细胞能够引发肿瘤生长。我们认为,在异种移植研究中观察到的维持肿瘤生长的细胞比例较低,可能反映了人类肿瘤细胞在异种(小鼠)环境中生长的适应能力有限。