# Carcinogenic effect of human tumor-derived cell-free filtrates in nude mice

**Authors:** Jorge Berlanga-Acosta, Ernesto Arteaga-Hernandez, Ariana Garcia-Ojalvo, Dayanis Duvergel-Calderin, Marisol Rodriguez-Touseiro, Laura Lopez-Marin, Jose Suarez-Alba, Dasha Fuentes-Morales, Osmany Mendoza-Fuentes, Sheyla Fernández-Puentes, Yanier Nuñez-Figueredo, Gerardo Guillen-Nieto

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2024.1361377 · 2024-04-18

## TL;DR

This study shows that tumor-derived cell-free filtrates can cause cancer in healthy mice, suggesting the presence of 'malignancy drivers' in these extracts.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that tumor homogenates can act as vectors for carcinogenesis in healthy mice, extending prior findings.

## Key findings

- Mammary carcinoma homogenates induced lung adenocarcinomas and small cell-like carcinomas in mice.
- Pancreatic and melanoma homogenates caused deterioration in mouse health and specific tumor formations.
- Zebrafish embryos exposed to breast tumor homogenates showed increased c-Myc and HER-2 expression.

## Abstract

Cancer remains a worldwide cause of morbidity and mortality. Investigational research efforts have included the administration of tumor-derived extracts to healthy animals. Having previously demonstrated that the administration of non-transmissible, human cancer-derived homogenates induced malignant tumors in mice, here, we examined the consequences of administering 50 or 100 µg of protein of crude homogenates from mammary carcinoma, pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and melanoma samples in 6 inoculations per week during 2 months. The concurrent control mice received homogenates of healthy donor-skin cosmetic surgery fragments. Mammary carcinoma homogenate administration did not provoke the deterioration or mortality of the animals. Multiple foci of lung adenocarcinomas with a broad expression of malignity histomarkers coexisting with small cell-like carcinomas were found. Disseminated cells, positive to classic epithelial markers, were detected in lymphoid nodes. The administration of pancreatic tumor and melanoma homogenates progressively deteriorated animal health. Pancreatic tumor induced poorly differentiated lung adenocarcinomas and pancreatic islet hyperplasia. Melanoma affected lungs with solid pseudopapillary adenocarcinomas. Giant atypical hepatocytes were also observed. The kidney exhibited dispersed foci of neoplastic cells within a desmoplastic matrix. Nuclear overlapping with hyperchromatic nuclei, mitotic figures, and prominent nuclear atypia was identified in epidermal cells. None of these changes were ever detected in the control mice. Furthermore, the incubation of zebrafish embryos with breast tumor homogenates induced the expression of c-Myc and HER-2 as tumor markers, contrasting to embryos exposed to healthy tissue-derived material. This study confirms and extends our hypothesis that tumor homogenates contain and may act as vectors for “malignancy drivers,” which ultimately implement a carcinogenesis process in otherwise healthy mice.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** MYC (MYC proto-oncogene, bHLH transcription factor) [NCBI Gene 4609], ERBB2 (erb-b2 receptor tyrosine kinase 2) [NCBI Gene 2064]
- **Diseases:** mammary carcinoma (MONDO:0004989), pancreatic adenocarcinoma (MONDO:0006047), melanoma (MONDO:0005105), lung adenocarcinoma (MONDO:0005061)
- **Species:** Mus musculus (taxon 10090), Danio rerio (taxon 7955)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** myca (MYC proto-oncogene, bHLH transcription factor a) [NCBI Gene 30686] {aka MYC, c-myc, cmyc, zc-myc}, her2 (hairy-related 2) [NCBI Gene 30300] {aka HER-2}
- **Diseases:** small cell-like carcinomas (MESH:D018288), Melanoma (MESH:D008545), Carcinogenic (MESH:D011230), Cancer (MESH:D009369), lung adenocarcinomas (MESH:D000077192), Mammary carcinoma (MESH:D001943), pancreatic islet hyperplasia (MESH:D007516), solid pseudopapillary adenocarcinomas (MESH:D000230), Pancreatic tumor (MESH:D010190), carcinogenesis (MESH:D063646)
- **Species:** Mus musculus (house mouse, species) [taxon 10090], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Danio rerio (leopard danio, species) [taxon 7955]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11063718/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11063718