Polyoma virus-induced osteosarcomas in inbred strains of mice: host determinants of metastasis. 2010

Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.

The mouse polyoma virus induces a broad array of solid tumors in mice of many inbred strains. In most strains tumors grow rapidly but fail to metastasize. An exception has been found in the Czech-II/Ei mouse in which bone tumors metastasize regularly to the lung. These tumors resemble human osteosarcoma in their propensity for pulmonary metastasis. Cell lines established from these metastatic tumors have been compared with ones from non-metastatic osteosarcomas arising in C3H/BiDa mice. Osteopontin, a chemokine implicated in migration and metastasis, is known to be transcriptionally induced by the viral middle T antigen. Czech-II/Ei and C3H/BiDa tumor cells expressed middle T and secreted osteopontin at comparable levels as the major chemoattractant. The tumor cell lines migrated equally well in response to recombinant osteopontin as the sole attractant. An important difference emerged in assays for invasion in which tumor cells from Czech-II/Ei mice were able to invade across an extracellular matrix barrier while those from C3H/BiDa mice were unable to invade. Invasive behavior was linked to elevated levels of the metalloproteinase MMP-2 and of the transcription factor NFAT. Inhibition of either MMP-2 or NFAT inhibited invasion by Czech-II/Ei osteosarcoma cells. The metastatic phenotype is dominant in F1 mice. Osteosarcoma cell lines from F1 mice expressed intermediate levels of MMP-2 and NFAT and were invasive. Osteosarcomas in Czech-II/Ei mice retain functional p53. This virus-host model of metastasis differs from engineered models targeting p53 or pRb and provides a system for investigating the genetic and molecular basis of bone tumor metastasis in the absence of p53 loss.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008175 Lung Neoplasms Tumors or cancer of the LUNG. Cancer of Lung,Lung Cancer,Pulmonary Cancer,Pulmonary Neoplasms,Cancer of the Lung,Neoplasms, Lung,Neoplasms, Pulmonary,Cancer, Lung,Cancer, Pulmonary,Cancers, Lung,Cancers, Pulmonary,Lung Cancers,Lung Neoplasm,Neoplasm, Lung,Neoplasm, Pulmonary,Pulmonary Cancers,Pulmonary Neoplasm
D009361 Neoplasm Invasiveness Ability of neoplasms to infiltrate and actively destroy surrounding tissue. Invasiveness, Neoplasm,Neoplasm Invasion,Invasion, Neoplasm
D011120 Polyomavirus A genus of potentially oncogenic viruses of the family POLYOMAVIRIDAE. These viruses are normally present in their natural hosts as latent infections. The virus is oncogenic in hosts different from the species of origin. Bovine polyomavirus,Murine polyomavirus,Hamster polyomavirus,Polyoma Virus,Polyoma Viruses,Bovine polyomaviruses,Hamster polyomaviruses,Murine polyomaviruses,Polyomaviruses,Virus, Polyoma,Viruses, Polyoma,polyomavirus, Hamster,polyomaviruses, Bovine,polyomaviruses, Murine
D001859 Bone Neoplasms Tumors or cancer located in bone tissue or specific BONES. Bone Cancer,Cancer of Bone,Cancer of the Bone,Neoplasms, Bone,Bone Neoplasm,Neoplasm, Bone
D002465 Cell Movement The movement of cells from one location to another. Distinguish from CYTOKINESIS which is the process of dividing the CYTOPLASM of a cell. Cell Migration,Locomotion, Cell,Migration, Cell,Motility, Cell,Movement, Cell,Cell Locomotion,Cell Motility,Cell Movements,Movements, Cell
D004195 Disease Models, Animal Naturally-occurring or experimentally-induced animal diseases with pathological processes analogous to human diseases. Animal Disease Model,Animal Disease Models,Disease Model, Animal
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D012516 Osteosarcoma A sarcoma originating in bone-forming cells, affecting the ends of long bones. It is the most common and most malignant of sarcomas of the bones, and occurs chiefly among 10- to 25-year-old youths. (From Stedman, 25th ed) Sarcoma, Osteogenic,Osteogenic Sarcoma,Osteosarcoma Tumor,Osteogenic Sarcomas,Osteosarcoma Tumors,Osteosarcomas,Sarcomas, Osteogenic,Tumor, Osteosarcoma,Tumors, Osteosarcoma
D014162 Transfection The uptake of naked or purified DNA by CELLS, usually meaning the process as it occurs in eukaryotic cells. It is analogous to bacterial transformation (TRANSFORMATION, BACTERIAL) and both are routinely employed in GENE TRANSFER TECHNIQUES. Transfections
D015151 Immunoblotting Immunologic method used for detecting or quantifying immunoreactive substances. The substance is identified by first immobilizing it by blotting onto a membrane and then tagging it with labeled antibodies. Dot Immunoblotting,Electroimmunoblotting,Immunoelectroblotting,Reverse Immunoblotting,Immunoblotting, Dot,Immunoblotting, Reverse,Dot Immunoblottings,Electroimmunoblottings,Immunoblottings,Immunoblottings, Dot,Immunoblottings, Reverse,Immunoelectroblottings,Reverse Immunoblottings

Related Publications

Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
August 1966, Radiology,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
June 1964, Virology,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
June 1998, Oncogene,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
January 1978, Canadian journal of microbiology,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
January 1980, Substance and alcohol actions/misuse,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
November 1982, Japanese circulation journal,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
April 1964, Oral surgery, oral medicine, and oral pathology,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
October 1965, Journal of the National Cancer Institute,
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
February 1966, Science (New York, N.Y.),
Palanivel Velupillai, and Chang Kyoo Sung, and Yu Tian, and Jean Dahl, and John Carroll, and Roderick Bronson, and Thomas Benjamin
December 2009, Epilepsy research,
Copied contents to your clipboard!