Xenotransplantation of testicular tissue into nude mice can be used for detecting leukemic cell contamination

M Hou, M Andersson, S Eksborg, O Söder… - Human …, 2007 - academic.oup.com
M Hou, M Andersson, S Eksborg, O Söder, K Jahnukainen
Human reproduction, 2007academic.oup.com
BACKGROUND Xeno-grafting of testicular tissue may allow viable gamete maturation. This
would be beneficial for prepubertal cancer patients in that it may allow restoration of fertility
without the risk of a cancer relapse. However it is unknown whether cancer cells in the
testicular graft can transmit the malignancy into the host animal and also if gametes can be
retrieved from testicular grafts that are contaminated with malignant cells. METHODS Rat T-
cell leukemia was employed as the source of leukemic lymphoblasts and testicular tissue …
BACKGROUND
Xeno-grafting of testicular tissue may allow viable gamete maturation. This would be beneficial for prepubertal cancer patients in that it may allow restoration of fertility without the risk of a cancer relapse. However it is unknown whether cancer cells in the testicular graft can transmit the malignancy into the host animal and also if gametes can be retrieved from testicular grafts that are contaminated with malignant cells.
METHODS
Rat T-cell leukemia was employed as the source of leukemic lymphoblasts and testicular tissue. This was injected i.p. (lymphoblasts) or grafted s.c. (fresh or cryopreserved testicular tissue) into the back skin of intact nude mice. To simulate clinical autografting, testicular tissue was also transplanted into healthy piebald variegated (PVG) rats.
RESULTS
50–70% of the mice, receiving 200 or 6000 leukemic lymphoblasts, developed terminal leukemia. All mice, grafted with either fresh or cryopreserved testicular tissue from leukemic donor, developed generalized leukemia and/or local tumors. All syngenic PVG rats, treated in the same manner, died of generalized leukemia. In all of the retrieved leukemic grafts, rat spermatogenesis was destroyed and only leukemic infiltration was detected.
CONCLUSIONS
Grafting testicular tissue contaminated with leukemic cells led to tumor growth at the injection site without potential to differentiate germline stem cells into gametes. Xenografting could provide a novel functional strategy for simultaneous detection of malignant cell contamination and spermatogonial potential in testicular xenografts collected for fertility preservation.
Oxford University Press