International Journal of Hepatology (Jan 2011)

Role of Tumor Associated Fibroblasts in Human Liver Regeneration, Cirrhosis, and Cancer

  • Daniela Cesselli,
  • Antonio Paolo Beltrami,
  • Alessandra Poz,
  • Stefania Marzinotto,
  • Elisa Comisso,
  • Natascha Bergamin,
  • Evgenia Bourkoula,
  • Anja Pucer,
  • Elisa Puppato,
  • Barbara Toffoletto,
  • Marisa Sorrentino,
  • Umberto Baccarani,
  • Claudio Avellini,
  • Carlo Alberto Beltrami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4061/2011/120925
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2011

Abstract

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Tumor associated fibroblasts (TAFs) are considered a microenvironmental element critical for tumor growth and progression. Experimental studies suggest that their origin could be from mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) derived from the bone marrow. However, the role played by TAFs in cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma development, and progression is largely unknown, and in vitro human models are missing. This paper for the first time demonstrates that (1) human neoplastic livers possess a population of multipotent adult stem cells (MASCs) with properties of TAFs; (2) a population of MASC-derived TAFs is already present in cirrhotic, not yet neoplastic, livers; (3) MASCs isolated from nonneoplastic and noncirrhotic liver scan acquire a TAF phenotype when grown in a medium conditioned by tumor cell lines, supporting the notion that TAF could originate from resident primitive cells (MASCs), possibly through a paracrine mechanism.