iScience (Jul 2021)

Renal neoplasms in tuberous sclerosis mice are neurocristopathies

  • Uchenna Unachukwu,
  • Takayuki Shiomi,
  • Monica Goldklang,
  • Kiran Chada,
  • Jeanine D'Armiento

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 7
p. 102684

Abstract

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Summary: Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is a rare disorder exhibiting multi-systemic benign neoplasms. We hypothesized the origin of TS neoplastic cells derived from the neural crest given the heterogeneous ecto-mesenchymal phenotype of the most common TS neoplasms. To test this hypothesis, we employed Cre-loxP lineage tracing of myelin protein zero (Mpz)-expressing neural crest cells (NCCs) in spontaneously developing renal tumors of Tsc2+/−/Mpz(Cre)/TdTfl/fl reporter mice. In these mice, ectopic renal tumor onset was detected at 4 months of age increasing in volume by 16 months of age with concomitant increase in the subpopulation of tdTomato+ NCCs from 0% to 6.45% of the total number of renal tumor cells. Our results suggest that Tsc2+/− mouse renal tumors arise from domiciled proliferative progenitor cell populations of neural crest origin that co-opt tumorigenesis due to mutations in Tsc2 loci. Targeting neural crest antigenic determinants will provide a potential alternative therapeutic approach for TS pathogenesis.

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