TY - JOUR
T1 - Establishment of an in vivo model for pediatric ewing tumors by transplantation into NOD/scid mice
AU - Vormoor, Josef
AU - Baersch, Gudrun
AU - Decker, Stephan
AU - Hotfilder, Marc
AU - Schäfer, Karkl Ludwif
AU - Pelken, Lutz
AU - Rübe, Cristian
AU - Van Valen, Frans
AU - Jürgens, Heribert
AU - Dockhorn-Dworniczak, Barbara
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - Ewing tumors are a clinically heterogeneous group of childhood sarcomas that represent a paradigm for understanding solid tumor biology, as they are the first group of sarcomas for which a chromosome translocation has been characterized at the molecular level. However, the biologic organization of the tumor, especially the processes that govern proliferation, differentiation, and metastasis of primitive tumor stem cells is poorly understood. Therefore, to develop a biologically relevant in vivo model, five different Ewing tumor cell lines and primary tumor cells from three patients were transplanted into immune-deficient mice via intravenous injection. NOD/scid mice that carry a complex immune deficiency and thus nearly completely lack the ability to reject human cells were used as recipients. Overall, 26 of 52 mice (50%) transplanted with VH-64, WE-68, CADO-ES1, TC-71, and RM-82 cells and 4 of 10 mice (40%) transplanted with primary tumor cells engrafted. Moreover, primary cells that did not grow in vitro proliferated in mice. The pattern of metastasis was similar to that in patients with frequent metastases in lungs (62%), bone marrow (30%), and bone (23%). Using limiting dilution experiments, the frequency of the engraftment unit was estimated at 1 Ewing tumor-initiating cell in 3 × 105 VH-64 cells. These data demonstrate that we have been able to establish an in vivo model that recapitulates many aspects of growth and progression of human Ewing tumors. For the first time, this model provides the opportunity to identify and characterize primitive in vivo clonogenic solid tumor stem cells. This model will, therefore, be instrumental in studying many aspects of tumor cell biology, including organ-selective metastasis and tumor angiogenesis.
AB - Ewing tumors are a clinically heterogeneous group of childhood sarcomas that represent a paradigm for understanding solid tumor biology, as they are the first group of sarcomas for which a chromosome translocation has been characterized at the molecular level. However, the biologic organization of the tumor, especially the processes that govern proliferation, differentiation, and metastasis of primitive tumor stem cells is poorly understood. Therefore, to develop a biologically relevant in vivo model, five different Ewing tumor cell lines and primary tumor cells from three patients were transplanted into immune-deficient mice via intravenous injection. NOD/scid mice that carry a complex immune deficiency and thus nearly completely lack the ability to reject human cells were used as recipients. Overall, 26 of 52 mice (50%) transplanted with VH-64, WE-68, CADO-ES1, TC-71, and RM-82 cells and 4 of 10 mice (40%) transplanted with primary tumor cells engrafted. Moreover, primary cells that did not grow in vitro proliferated in mice. The pattern of metastasis was similar to that in patients with frequent metastases in lungs (62%), bone marrow (30%), and bone (23%). Using limiting dilution experiments, the frequency of the engraftment unit was estimated at 1 Ewing tumor-initiating cell in 3 × 105 VH-64 cells. These data demonstrate that we have been able to establish an in vivo model that recapitulates many aspects of growth and progression of human Ewing tumors. For the first time, this model provides the opportunity to identify and characterize primitive in vivo clonogenic solid tumor stem cells. This model will, therefore, be instrumental in studying many aspects of tumor cell biology, including organ-selective metastasis and tumor angiogenesis.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0035098213&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1203/00006450-200103000-00006
DO - 10.1203/00006450-200103000-00006
M3 - Article
C2 - 11228258
AN - SCOPUS:0035098213
SN - 0031-3998
VL - 49
SP - 332
EP - 341
JO - Pediatric Research
JF - Pediatric Research
IS - 3
ER -