Davies D E, Farmer S, White J, Senior P V, Warnes S L, Alexander P
CRC Medical Oncology Unit, Southampton General Hospital, UK.
Br J Cancer. 1994 Aug;70(2):263-9. doi: 10.1038/bjc.1994.290.
The contribution of host-derived growth factors to tumour growth in vivo was studied using the transplantable murine mammary carcinoma, MT1, grown in syngeneic mice. Promotion of growth of the mammary carcinoma by a factor(s) from the host was evident in experiments in which the carcinoma cells were inoculated intraperitoneally. In this environment, tumours develop as multiple solid nodules, each probably arising from an individual cell or a small cluster of cells. Tumour growth was found to occur in the peritoneal cavity following inoculation of 10(3) cells, but an inoculum of as few as ten cells grew if a leucocyte-rich exudate had first been induced. To determine which host-derived growth factors might contribute to growth of MT1, extracts of the tumour were first examined for growth factor activity. Fractionation of tumour extracts by either ion-exchange chromatography or gel filtration revealed several peaks of mitogenic activity, but none of this could be attributed to epidermal growth factor (EGF). Accordingly, an anti-EGF antibody was tested as a putative inhibitor of tumour growth as any effect of this antibody could be ascribed to removal of EGF derived from the host. The antibody was found to have potent anti-tumour activity when tested against MT1 tumours that had been inoculated into the peritoneal cavity. In contrast, the antibody had little effect on growth of the discrete tumour mass which formed when MT1 was transplanted subcutaneously. The results suggest that host-derived EGF contributes to establishment of microcolonies of MT1 carcinoma within the peritoneal cavity. This may be directly, by providing growth factors to supplement those produced by the tumour until it reaches a certain critical mass to sustain autocrine growth, or indirectly, by affecting the production of other growth-stimulatory factors or cytokines.
利用在同基因小鼠体内生长的可移植性小鼠乳腺癌MT1,研究了宿主来源的生长因子对体内肿瘤生长的作用。在将癌细胞腹腔接种的实验中,宿主来源的一种或多种因子对乳腺癌生长的促进作用很明显。在这种环境下,肿瘤会发展为多个实体瘤结节,每个结节可能都源自单个细胞或一小簇细胞。接种10³个细胞后,肿瘤在腹腔内生长,但如果首先诱导出富含白细胞的渗出液,那么接种少至10个细胞也能生长。为了确定哪些宿主来源的生长因子可能有助于MT1的生长,首先检测了肿瘤提取物的生长因子活性。通过离子交换色谱法或凝胶过滤法对肿瘤提取物进行分级分离,发现了几个有丝分裂活性峰,但这些都不能归因于表皮生长因子(EGF)。因此,测试了一种抗EGF抗体作为肿瘤生长的假定抑制剂,因为该抗体的任何作用都可归因于去除了宿主来源的EGF。当针对接种到腹腔内的MT1肿瘤进行测试时,发现该抗体具有强大的抗肿瘤活性。相比之下,该抗体对MT1皮下移植时形成的离散肿瘤块的生长几乎没有影响。结果表明,宿主来源的EGF有助于MT1癌在腹腔内形成微菌落。这可能是直接的,通过提供生长因子来补充肿瘤产生的生长因子,直到肿瘤达到一定的临界质量以维持自分泌生长;或者是间接的,通过影响其他生长刺激因子或细胞因子的产生。