Metastatic colonization potential of primary tumour cells in mice
Open Access
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in British Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 39 (6) , 740-754
- https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1979.128
Abstract
A model has been developed for studying the capability of cells from primary murine mammary tumours to establish colonies in distant organs. The model involves the i.v. inoculation of disaggregated tumour cells into autologous and syngeneic recipients. The results show that the metastatic colonization potential of cells from a given tumour is consistent within the animals of an inoculated batch. Also, the findings are uniform in the autologous host and the syngeneic recipients. Tumours vary in their colonization potential and can be classified in 2 main groups designated high and low. These findings indicate that: (i) cells from 37% of mammary tumours can heavily colonize the lungs when inoculated i.v., even though the incidence of metastatic spread of these tumours in the undisturbed animal is almost zero. Thus, the relative infrequency of spontaneous metastasis from murine mammary tumours is not due to inability of the tumour cells to survive and colonize once free in the blood stream; and (ii) the colonization potential of the tumours is an intrinsic property of the tumour cells rather than of the host, whose prior acquaintance with the cells does not seem to confer resistance to colonization. The model presents opportunities for identification of possible differences between tumours of high and low colonization potential, and is being used to study cellular properties which favour colonization of distant organs by comparison of observations in vitro with the behaviour of cells from the same tumour in vivo.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- TUMOR HETEROGENEITY AND BIOLOGY OF CANCER INVASION AND METASTASIS1978
- METASTATIC HETEROGENEITY OF CELLS FROM AN ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT-INDUCED MURINE FIBROSARCOMA OF RECENT ORIGIN1978
- The influence of host immunity on the arrest of circulating cancer cells, and its modification by neuraminidaseInternational Journal of Cancer, 1974
- Influence of cultivation, trypsinization and aggregation on the transplantability of melanoma B16 cellsInternational Journal of Cancer, 1973
- Macrocolony Assays in the Rat of Allogeneic Y-P388 and W-256 Tumour Cells Injected Intravenously: Dependence of Colony Forming Efficiency on Age of Host and ImmunityBritish Journal of Cancer, 1973