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Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice

Aging intersects with reproductive senescence in women by promoting a systemic low-grade chronic inflammation that predisposes women to several diseases including ovarian cancer (OC). OC risk at menopause is significantly modified by parity records during prior fertile life. To date, the combined ef...

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Autores principales: Urzua, Ulises, Chacon, Carlos, Lizama, Luis, Sarmiento, Sebastián, Villalobos, Pía, Kroxato, Belén, Marcelain, Katherine, Gonzalez, María-Julieta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JKL International LLC 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5614320/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28966800
http://dx.doi.org/10.14336/AD.2017.0110
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author Urzua, Ulises
Chacon, Carlos
Lizama, Luis
Sarmiento, Sebastián
Villalobos, Pía
Kroxato, Belén
Marcelain, Katherine
Gonzalez, María-Julieta
author_facet Urzua, Ulises
Chacon, Carlos
Lizama, Luis
Sarmiento, Sebastián
Villalobos, Pía
Kroxato, Belén
Marcelain, Katherine
Gonzalez, María-Julieta
author_sort Urzua, Ulises
collection PubMed
description Aging intersects with reproductive senescence in women by promoting a systemic low-grade chronic inflammation that predisposes women to several diseases including ovarian cancer (OC). OC risk at menopause is significantly modified by parity records during prior fertile life. To date, the combined effects of age and parity on the systemic inflammation markers that are particularly relevant to OC initiation and progression at menopause remain largely unknown. Herein, we profiled a panel of circulating cytokines in multiparous versus virgin C57BL/6 female mice at peri-estropausal age and investigated how cytokine levels were modulated by intraperitoneal tumor induction in a syngeneic immunocompetent OC mouse model. Serum FSH, LH and TSH levels increased with age in both groups while prolactin (PRL) was lower in multiparous respect to virgin mice, a finding previously observed in parous women. Serum CCL2, IL-10, IL-5, IL-4, TNF-α, IL1-β and IL-12p70 levels increased with age irrespective of parity status, but were specifically reduced following OC tumor induction only in multiparous mice. Animals developed hemorrhagic ascites and tumor implants in the omental fat band and other intraperitoneal organs by 12 weeks after induction, with multiparous mice showing a significantly extended survival. We conclude that previous parity history counteracts aging-associated systemic inflammation possibly by reducing the immunosuppression that typically allows tumor spread. Results suggest a partial impairment of the M2 shift in tumor-associated macrophages as well as decreased stimulation of regulatory B-cells in aged mice. This long term, tumor-concurrent effect of parity on inflammation markers at menopause would be a contributing factor leading to decreased OC risk.
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spelling pubmed-56143202017-10-01 Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice Urzua, Ulises Chacon, Carlos Lizama, Luis Sarmiento, Sebastián Villalobos, Pía Kroxato, Belén Marcelain, Katherine Gonzalez, María-Julieta Aging Dis Original Article Aging intersects with reproductive senescence in women by promoting a systemic low-grade chronic inflammation that predisposes women to several diseases including ovarian cancer (OC). OC risk at menopause is significantly modified by parity records during prior fertile life. To date, the combined effects of age and parity on the systemic inflammation markers that are particularly relevant to OC initiation and progression at menopause remain largely unknown. Herein, we profiled a panel of circulating cytokines in multiparous versus virgin C57BL/6 female mice at peri-estropausal age and investigated how cytokine levels were modulated by intraperitoneal tumor induction in a syngeneic immunocompetent OC mouse model. Serum FSH, LH and TSH levels increased with age in both groups while prolactin (PRL) was lower in multiparous respect to virgin mice, a finding previously observed in parous women. Serum CCL2, IL-10, IL-5, IL-4, TNF-α, IL1-β and IL-12p70 levels increased with age irrespective of parity status, but were specifically reduced following OC tumor induction only in multiparous mice. Animals developed hemorrhagic ascites and tumor implants in the omental fat band and other intraperitoneal organs by 12 weeks after induction, with multiparous mice showing a significantly extended survival. We conclude that previous parity history counteracts aging-associated systemic inflammation possibly by reducing the immunosuppression that typically allows tumor spread. Results suggest a partial impairment of the M2 shift in tumor-associated macrophages as well as decreased stimulation of regulatory B-cells in aged mice. This long term, tumor-concurrent effect of parity on inflammation markers at menopause would be a contributing factor leading to decreased OC risk. JKL International LLC 2017-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5614320/ /pubmed/28966800 http://dx.doi.org/10.14336/AD.2017.0110 Text en Copyright: © 2017 Urzua et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ 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 that the original work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Article
Urzua, Ulises
Chacon, Carlos
Lizama, Luis
Sarmiento, Sebastián
Villalobos, Pía
Kroxato, Belén
Marcelain, Katherine
Gonzalez, María-Julieta
Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice
title Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice
title_full Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice
title_fullStr Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice
title_full_unstemmed Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice
title_short Parity History Determines a Systemic Inflammatory Response to Spread of Ovarian Cancer in Naturally Aged Mice
title_sort parity history determines a systemic inflammatory response to spread of ovarian cancer in naturally aged mice
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5614320/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28966800
http://dx.doi.org/10.14336/AD.2017.0110
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