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Finding the source: Cells that initiate a common infant tumor identified

06.05.08 | JCI Journals

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Infantile hemangiomas, exemplified by the strawberry-like patches that appear on the skin of infants soon after birth, are benign tumors that develop in 5%-10% of Caucasian infants and usually disappear by the age of 9 without treatment. Joyce Bischoff and colleagues, at Children's Hospital Boston, have now identified the cells that give rise to these tumors and used them to develop a new mouse model of this disease.

Cells expressing the protein CD133 were isolated from infantile hemangioma tissue and individual cells were grown separately in culture. After each cell had been grown long enough for it to have given rise to a large population of cells, the cells were transplanted into immunodeficient mice, where they generated human blood vessels. Overtime, the number of blood vessels decreased and fat cells became evident. As these observations recapitulate those made in individuals with infantile hemangioma — where blood vessels form and then disappear leaving behind fat cells — the authors conclude that a single cell can give rise to infantile hemangioma and that their new model of these tumors will help identify therapeutic targets.

TITLE: Multipotential stem cells recapitulate human infantile hemangioma in immunodeficient mice

AUTHOR CONTACT:
Joyce Bischoff
Children's Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Phone: (617) 919-2192; Fax: (617) 730-0231; E-mail: joyce.bischoff@childrens.harvard.edu .

View the PDF of this article at: https://www.the-jci.org/article.php?id=33493

Journal of Clinical Investigation

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Article Information

Contact Information

Karen Honey
JCI Journals
press_releases@thje-jci.org

How to Cite This Article

APA:
JCI Journals. (2008, June 5). Finding the source: Cells that initiate a common infant tumor identified. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80VZ3WJL/finding-the-source-cells-that-initiate-a-common-infant-tumor-identified.html
MLA:
"Finding the source: Cells that initiate a common infant tumor identified." Brightsurf News, Jun. 5 2008, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80VZ3WJL/finding-the-source-cells-that-initiate-a-common-infant-tumor-identified.html.