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Co-option of pre-existing vascular beds in adipose tissue controls tumor growth rates and angiogenesis

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posted on 2016-09-14, 15:07 authored by Sharon Lim, Kayoko Hosaka, Masaki Nakamura, Yihai Cao
Many types of cancer develop in close association with highly vascularized adipose tissues. However, the role of adipose pre-existing vascular beds on tumor growth and angiogenesis is unknown. Here we report that pre-existing microvascular density in tissues where tumors originate is a crucial determinant for tumor growth and neovascularization. In three independent tumor types including breast cancer, melanoma, and fibrosarcoma, inoculation of tumor cells in the subcutaneous tissue, white adipose tissue (WAT), and brown adipose tissue (BAT) resulted in markedly differential tumor growth rates and angiogenesis, which were in concordance with the degree of pre-existing vascularization in these tissues. Relative to subcutaneous tumors, WAT and BAT tumors grew at accelerated rates along with improved neovascularization, blood perfusion, and decreased hypoxia. Tumor cells implanted in adipose tissues contained leaky microvessel with poor perivascular cell coverage. Thus, adipose vasculature predetermines the tumor microenvironment that eventually supports tumor growth.

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Citation

Oncotarget, 2016, 7 (25), pp. 38282-38291

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Oncotarget

Publisher

Impact Journals

eissn

1949-2553

Acceptance date

2016-04-27

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2016-09-14

Publisher version

http://www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget/index.php?journal=oncotarget&page=article&op=view&path[]=9436

Language

en

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