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Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells

Evidences indicate that tumor development and progression towards a malignant phenotype depend not only on cancer cells themselves, but are also deeply influenced by tumor stroma reactivity. The present study uses mesenchymal stem cells from normal human uterine cervix (hUCESCs), isolated by the min...

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Autores principales: Eiró, Noemí, Sendon-Lago, Juan, Seoane, Samuel, Bermúdez, María A., Lamelas, Maria Luz, Garcia-Caballero, Tomás, Schneider, José, Perez-Fernandez, Roman, Vizoso, Francisco J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4279403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25296979
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author Eiró, Noemí
Sendon-Lago, Juan
Seoane, Samuel
Bermúdez, María A.
Lamelas, Maria Luz
Garcia-Caballero, Tomás
Schneider, José
Perez-Fernandez, Roman
Vizoso, Francisco J.
author_facet Eiró, Noemí
Sendon-Lago, Juan
Seoane, Samuel
Bermúdez, María A.
Lamelas, Maria Luz
Garcia-Caballero, Tomás
Schneider, José
Perez-Fernandez, Roman
Vizoso, Francisco J.
author_sort Eiró, Noemí
collection PubMed
description Evidences indicate that tumor development and progression towards a malignant phenotype depend not only on cancer cells themselves, but are also deeply influenced by tumor stroma reactivity. The present study uses mesenchymal stem cells from normal human uterine cervix (hUCESCs), isolated by the minimally invasive method of routine Pap cervical smear, to study their effect on the three main cell types in a tumor: cancer cells, fibroblasts and macrophages. Administration of hUCESCs-conditioned medium (CM) to a highly invasive breast cancer MDA-MB-231 cell line and to human breast tumors with high cell proliferation rates had the effect of reducing cell proliferation, modifying the cell cycle, inducing apoptosis, and decreasing invasion. In a xenograft mouse tumor model, hUCESCs-CM reduced tumor growth and increased overall survival. In cancer-associated fibroblasts, administration of hUCESCs-CM resulted in reduced cell proliferation, greater apoptosis and decreased invasion. In addition, hUCESCs-CM inhibited and reverted macrophage differentiation. The analysis of hUCESCs-CM (fresh and lyophilized) suggests that a complex paracrine signaling network could be implicated in the anti-tumor potential of hUCESCs. In light of their anti-tumor potential, the easy cell isolation method, and the fact that lyophilization of their CM conserves original properties make hUCESCs good candidates for experimental or clinical applications in anticancer therapy.
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spelling pubmed-42794032015-01-06 Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells Eiró, Noemí Sendon-Lago, Juan Seoane, Samuel Bermúdez, María A. Lamelas, Maria Luz Garcia-Caballero, Tomás Schneider, José Perez-Fernandez, Roman Vizoso, Francisco J. Oncotarget Research Paper Evidences indicate that tumor development and progression towards a malignant phenotype depend not only on cancer cells themselves, but are also deeply influenced by tumor stroma reactivity. The present study uses mesenchymal stem cells from normal human uterine cervix (hUCESCs), isolated by the minimally invasive method of routine Pap cervical smear, to study their effect on the three main cell types in a tumor: cancer cells, fibroblasts and macrophages. Administration of hUCESCs-conditioned medium (CM) to a highly invasive breast cancer MDA-MB-231 cell line and to human breast tumors with high cell proliferation rates had the effect of reducing cell proliferation, modifying the cell cycle, inducing apoptosis, and decreasing invasion. In a xenograft mouse tumor model, hUCESCs-CM reduced tumor growth and increased overall survival. In cancer-associated fibroblasts, administration of hUCESCs-CM resulted in reduced cell proliferation, greater apoptosis and decreased invasion. In addition, hUCESCs-CM inhibited and reverted macrophage differentiation. The analysis of hUCESCs-CM (fresh and lyophilized) suggests that a complex paracrine signaling network could be implicated in the anti-tumor potential of hUCESCs. In light of their anti-tumor potential, the easy cell isolation method, and the fact that lyophilization of their CM conserves original properties make hUCESCs good candidates for experimental or clinical applications in anticancer therapy. Impact Journals LLC 2014-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4279403/ /pubmed/25296979 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Eiró et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Eiró, Noemí
Sendon-Lago, Juan
Seoane, Samuel
Bermúdez, María A.
Lamelas, Maria Luz
Garcia-Caballero, Tomás
Schneider, José
Perez-Fernandez, Roman
Vizoso, Francisco J.
Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells
title Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells
title_full Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells
title_fullStr Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells
title_full_unstemmed Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells
title_short Potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells
title_sort potential therapeutic effect of the secretome from human uterine cervical stem cells against both cancer and stromal cells compared with adipose tissue stem cells
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4279403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25296979
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