大鼠 9L-epigastric 肿瘤的血流和缺氧生成机制

Cameron J Koch, W Timothy Jenkins, Kevin W Jenkins, Xiang Yang Yang, A Lee Shuman, Stephen Pickup, Caitlyn R Riehl, Ramesh Paudyal, Harish Poptani, Sydney M Evans
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摘要

肿瘤生理学的经典描述表明,肿瘤缺氧有两种起源:稳态(扩散受限)缺氧和循环(灌注调节)缺氧。这两种缺氧起源主要是在小鼠模型中研究和描述的,预示着相对较小、孤立的缺氧组织灶或薄壳与对比鲜明的缺氧组织相交错。由于氧扩散距离(由氧通透性和组织耗氧率决定)不会因肿瘤的不同而发生显著变化,因此预计这些病灶或薄壳不会随肿瘤的整体大小而变化。我们在大鼠胶质肉瘤肿瘤和较大的人类肿瘤(尤其是肉瘤和高级别胶质瘤)中发现了更大的(宏观)缺氧区域,缺氧标记物 EF5 的生化结合显示了这一点。因此,我们认为肿瘤缺氧的另一个原因与首次在窗腔肿瘤模型中观察到的现象有关:即纵向动脉梯度。尽管最初描述的纵向动脉血管梯度也是微观性质的,但如果肿瘤血流以适当的方式组织起来,它们就有可能随着肿瘤的大小而扩大。在这种组织方式中,流入的血液来自相对氧合较好的源头,分支后与氧合较差的流出血液汇合,其距离远远大于传统动脉血管的长度(多毫米尺度)。这一新颖的概念不同于肿瘤血流无序和/或混乱的常见特征。组织血流以产生延伸的纵向梯度和宏观区域缺氧对肿瘤的成像、治疗和生物学特性有许多重要影响。在此,我们利用生长在上腹部动脉/静脉对上的大鼠 9L 胶质肉瘤肿瘤,首次报告了这种血流的实验证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mechanisms of blood flow and hypoxia production in rat 9L-epigastric tumors.

Classical descriptions of tumor physiology suggest two origins for tumor hypoxia; steady-state (diffusion-limited) hypoxia and cycling (perfusion-modulated) hypoxia. Both origins, primarily studied and characterized in murine models, predict relatively small, isolated foci or thin shells of hypoxic tissue interspersed with contrasting oxic tissue. These foci or shells would not be expected to scale with overall tumor size since the oxygen diffusion distance (determined by oxygen permeability and tissue oxygen consumption rate) is not known to vary dramatically from tumor to tumor. We have identified much larger (macroscopic) regions of hypoxia in rat gliosarcoma tumors and in larger human tumors (notably sarcomas and high-grade glial tumors), as indicated by biochemical binding of the hypoxia marker, EF5. Thus, we considered an alternative cause of tumor hypoxia related to a phenomenon first observed in window-chamber tumor models: namely longitudinal arteriole gradients. Although longitudinal arteriole gradients, as originally described, are also microscopic in nature, it is possible for them to scale with tumor size if tumor blood flow is organized in an appropriate manner. In this organization, inflowing blood would arise from relatively well-oxygenated sources and would branch and then coalesce to poorly-oxygenated outflowing blood over distances much larger than the length of conventional arterioles (multi-millimeter scale). This novel concept differs from the common characterization of tumor blood flow as disorganized and/or chaotic. The organization of blood flow to produce extended longitudinal gradients and macroscopic regional hypoxia has many important implications for the imaging, therapy and biological properties of tumors. Herein, we report the first experimental evidence for such blood flow, using rat 9L gliosarcoma tumors grown on the epigastric artery/vein pair.

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