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. 2018 Nov;16(11):1652-1664.
doi: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-18-0308. Epub 2018 Jul 13.

Atrophied Thymus, a Tumor Reservoir for Harboring Melanoma Cells

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Free article

Atrophied Thymus, a Tumor Reservoir for Harboring Melanoma Cells

Olga Sizova et al. Mol Cancer Res. 2018 Nov.
Free article

Abstract

Tumor metastatic relapse is the primary cause for cancer-associated mortality. Metastatic relapse is believed to arise from quantities of tumor cells that are below detectable thresholds, which are able to resist radio/chemotherapy by obtaining a dormant state and hiding in certain organs, i.e., tumor reservoirs. The thymus, a central T-cell immune organ, has been suggested to be a premetastatic tumor reservoir for B-lymphoma cells. However, it remains unknown whether the thymus is able to harbor nonlymphoid solid tumor cells, and whether chemotherapy can thoroughly eliminate cancer cells in the thymus. If chemotherapy is not able to eliminate these cells in the thymus, then what processes allow for this? Melanoma cell-inoculated and genotoxic doxorubicin-treated mouse model systems were used to determine that the thymus, particularly the atrophied thymus, was able to harbor blood stream-circulating melanoma cells. In addition, a chemotherapy-induced DNA-damage response triggered p53 activation in nonmalignant thymic cells, which in turn resulted in thymocyte death and thymic epithelial cell senescence to develop an inflammatory thymic microenvironment. This inflammatory condition induced thymic-harbored minimal tumor cells to acquire a chemoresistant state.Implications: Here, the thymus serves as a premetastatic reservoir for nonlymphoid solid tumor cells during chemotherapy, which could be a novel target of minimal residual disease in antitumor therapy, thus preventing tumor metastatic relapse. Mol Cancer Res; 16(11); 1652-64. ©2018 AACR.

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