Spontaneously formed tumorigenic hybrids of Meth A sarcoma and macrophages grow faster and are better vascularized than the parental tumor
Open Access
- 5 June 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 100 (4) , 407-413
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.10502
Abstract
Macrophages and Meth A sarcoma cells spontaneously fuse and give rise to tumorigenic hybrid cell lines with a mixed phenotype. We report here that the hybrid tumors grow faster and have a strikingly better developed vasculature than the parent sarcoma. Thus, electron microscopy and immunohistochemical analysis revealed that in the most active areas of neovascularization, the tumors that emerged from inocula of monoclonal hybrid cell populations had a microvessel density nearly twice that of Meth A tumors after 1 week of growth. Moreover, the proportion of vessels associated with pericytes, detected by staining for smooth muscle α‐actin, was 3 times higher in the hybrid tumors, attesting to the more advanced differentiation of their vasculature. The collagenous stroma component was also more extensive in the hybrid tumors. Concentration of the angiogenic proteins vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and transforming growth factor‐β (TGF‐β) were significantly higher in supernatants of hybrid cell cultures compared with Meth A cultures. These observations indicate that the growth advantage of the hybrid tumors over the parental sarcoma is due to a higher angiogenic capacity. Because the malignant features of many tumors correlate with angiogenesis and because macrophages are known to be major producers of angiogenic factors, our data open the possibility that the intense neovascularization of highly aggressive cancers in some cases reflects the acquisition of macrophage traits by heterotypic cell fusion.Keywords
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