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Enhanced basal autophagy supports ameloblastoma-derived cell survival and reactivation.

Authors :
Sharp, Rachel C.
Effiom, Olajumoke A.
Dhingra, Anuradha
Odukoya, Onatolu
Olawuyi, Adetokunbo
Arotiba, Godwin T.
Boesze-Battaglia, Kathleen
Akintoye, Sunday O.
Source :
Archives of Oral Biology. Feb2019, Vol. 98, p61-67. 7p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Highlights • Ameloblastoma contains a highly clonogenic epithelial-derived odontogenic cell population (EP-AMCs). • EP-AMCs display strong basal levels of autophagic proteins. • EP-AMCs regenerated ameloblastoma-like tumor recapitulating similar histological features of solid multicystic ameloblastoma. • Ameloblastoma-derived cells exhibit strong basal autophagic processes that can support post-treatment recurrence. Abstract Objectives Ameloblastoma is an aggressive odontogenic jaw neoplasm. Its unlimited growth confers high potential for malignant transformation and recurrence. It is unclear why ameloblastoma is highly recurrent despite surgical resection with a wide margin of normal tissue. While canonical autophagy can be used to degrade and eliminate damaged cellular components, it is also a protective mechanism that provides energy and vital metabolites for cell survival. We used ameloblastoma-derived cells to test the hypothesis that autophagic processes play a role in survival and reactivation of ameloblastoma. Methods Primary epithelial (EP-AMCs) and mesenchymal (MS-AMCs) ameloblastoma-derived cells were established from tissue samples of solid multicystic ameloblastoma. Clonogenic capacity and basal autophagic capacity were assessed in ameloblastoma-derived cells relative to human odontoma-derived cells (HODCs) and maxilla-mesenchymal stem cells (MX-MSCs). Ability of ameloblastoma-derived cells to survive and form new ameloblastoma was assessed in mouse tumor xenografts. Results EP-AMCs were highly clonogenic (p < 0.0001) and demonstrated enhanced basal levels of autophagic proteins microtubule-associated protein 1-light chain 3 (LC3) (p < 0.01), p62 (Sequestosome 1, SQSTM1) (p < 0.01), and the LC3-adapter, melanoregulin (MREG) (p < 0.05) relative to controls. EP-AMCs xenografts regenerated solid ameloblastoma-like tumor with histological features of columnar ameloblast-like cells, loose stellate reticulum-like cells and regions of cystic degeneration characteristic of follicular variant of solid multicystic ameloblastoma. The xenografts also displayed stromal epithelial invaginations strongly reactive to LC3 and p62 suggestive of epithelial-mesenchymal transition and neoplastic odontogenic epithelium. Conclusions EP-AMCs exhibit altered autophagic processes that can support survival and recurrence of post-surgical ameloblastoma cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00039969
Volume :
98
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Archives of Oral Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134185525
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.archoralbio.2018.11.013