Cellular Origin, Tumor Progression, and Pathogenic Mechanisms of Cutaneous Neurofibromas Revealed by Mice with Nf1 Knockout in Boundary Cap Cells

KJ Radomska, F Coulpier, A Gresset, A Schmitt… - Cancer discovery, 2019 - AACR
KJ Radomska, F Coulpier, A Gresset, A Schmitt, A Debbiche, S Lemoine, P Wolkenstein
Cancer discovery, 2019AACR
Patients carrying an inactive NF1 allele develop tumors of Schwann cell origin called
neurofibromas (NF). Genetically engineered mouse models have significantly enriched our
understanding of plexiform forms of NFs (pNF). However, this has not been the case for
cutaneous neurofibromas (cNF), observed in all NF1 patients, as no previous model
recapitulates their development. Here, we show that conditional Nf1 inactivation in Prss56-
positive boundary cap cells leads to bona fid e pNFs and cNFs. This work identifies …
Abstract
Patients carrying an inactive NF1 allele develop tumors of Schwann cell origin called neurofibromas (NF). Genetically engineered mouse models have significantly enriched our understanding of plexiform forms of NFs (pNF). However, this has not been the case for cutaneous neurofibromas (cNF), observed in all NF1 patients, as no previous model recapitulates their development. Here, we show that conditional Nf1 inactivation in Prss56-positive boundary cap cells leads to bona fide pNFs and cNFs. This work identifies subepidermal glia as a likely candidate for the cellular origin of cNFs and provides insights on disease mechanisms, revealing a long, multistep pathologic process in which inflammation-related signals play a pivotal role. This new mouse model is an important asset for future clinical and therapeutic investigations of NF1-associated neurofibromas.
Significance
Patients affected by NF1 develop numerous cNFs. We present a mouse model that faithfully recapitulates cNFs, identify a candidate cell type at their origin, analyze the steps involved in their formation, and show that their development is dramatically accelerated by skin injury. These findings have important clinical/therapeutic implications.
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