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Publication : Endothelial-to-Osteoblast Conversion Generates Osteoblastic Metastasis of Prostate Cancer.

First Author  Lin SC Year  2017
Journal  Dev Cell Volume  41
Issue  5 Pages  467-480.e3
PubMed ID  28586644 Mgi Jnum  J:253614
Mgi Id  MGI:6109821 Doi  10.1016/j.devcel.2017.05.005
Citation  Lin SC, et al. (2017) Endothelial-to-Osteoblast Conversion Generates Osteoblastic Metastasis of Prostate Cancer. Dev Cell 41(5):467-480.e3
abstractText  Prostate cancer (PCa) bone metastasis is frequently associated with bone-forming lesions, but the source of the osteoblastic lesions remains unclear. We show that the tumor-induced bone derives partly from tumor-associated endothelial cells that have undergone endothelial-to-osteoblast (EC-to-OSB) conversion. The tumor-associated osteoblasts in PCa bone metastasis specimens and patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) were found to co-express endothelial marker Tie-2. BMP4, identified in PDX-conditioned medium, promoted EC-to-OSB conversion of 2H11 endothelial cells. BMP4 overexpression in non-osteogenic C4-2b PCa cells led to ectopic bone formation under subcutaneous implantation. Tumor-induced bone was reduced in trigenic mice (Tie2(cre)/Osx(f/f)/SCID) with endothelial-specific deletion of osteoblast cell-fate determinant OSX compared with bigenic mice (Osx(f/f)/SCID). Thus, tumor-induced EC-to-OSB conversion is one mechanism that leads to osteoblastic bone metastasis of PCa.
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