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Hemangiosarcoma Cells Promote Conserved Host-derived Hematopoietic Expansion.

Authors :
Kim JH
Schulte AJ
Sarver AL
Lee D
Angelos MG
Frantz AM
Forster CL
O'Brien TD
Cornax I
O'Sullivan MG
Cheng N
Lewellen M
Oseth L
Kumar S
Bullman S
Pedamallu CS
Goyal SM
Meyerson M
Lund TC
Breen M
Lindblad-Toh K
Dickerson EB
Kaufman DS
Modiano JF
Source :
Cancer research communications [Cancer Res Commun] 2024 Jun 11; Vol. 4 (6), pp. 1467-1480.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Hemangiosarcoma and angiosarcoma are soft-tissue sarcomas of blood vessel-forming cells in dogs and humans, respectively. These vasoformative sarcomas are aggressive and highly metastatic, with disorganized, irregular blood-filled vascular spaces. Our objective was to define molecular programs which support the niche that enables progression of canine hemangiosarcoma and human angiosarcoma. Dog-in-mouse hemangiosarcoma xenografts recapitulated the vasoformative and highly angiogenic morphology and molecular characteristics of primary tumors. Blood vessels in the tumors were complex and disorganized, and they were lined by both donor and host cells. In a series of xenografts, we observed that the transplanted hemangiosarcoma cells created exuberant myeloid hyperplasia and gave rise to lymphoproliferative tumors of mouse origin. Our functional analyses indicate that hemangiosarcoma cells generate a microenvironment that supports expansion and differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor populations. Furthermore, gene expression profiling data revealed hemangiosarcoma cells expressed a repertoire of hematopoietic cytokines capable of regulating the surrounding stromal cells. We conclude that canine hemangiosarcomas, and possibly human angiosarcomas, maintain molecular properties that provide hematopoietic support and facilitate stromal reactions, suggesting their potential involvement in promoting the growth of hematopoietic tumors.<br />Significance: We demonstrate that hemangiosarcomas regulate molecular programs supporting hematopoietic expansion and differentiation, providing insights into their potential roles in creating a permissive stromal-immune environment for tumor progression.<br /> (© 2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2767-9764
Volume :
4
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer research communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38757809
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-23-0441