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Abstract
Ovarian cancer is an insidious and
aggressive disease of older women, typically undiscovered prior to
peritoneal metastasis
due to its asymptomatic nature and lack of early
detection tools. Epidemiological studies suggest that child-bearing
(parity)
is associated with decreased ovarian cancer risk,
although the molecular mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon have
not
been delineated. Ovarian cancer preferentially
metastasizes to the omental fat band (OFB), a secondary lymphoid organ
that
aids in filtration of the peritoneal serous fluid
(PSF) and helps combat peritoneal infections. In the present study we
assessed
how parity and age impact the immune compositional
profile in the OFB of mice, both in the homeostatic state and as a
consequence
of peritoneal implantation of ovarian cancer. Using
fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis and quantitative realtime
PCR, we found that parity was associated with a
significant reduction in omental monocytic subsets and B1-B lymphocytes,
correlating
with reduced homeostatic expression levels of key
chemoattractants and polarization factors (Ccl1, Ccl2, Arg1, Cxcl13). Of
note, parous animals exhibited significantly
reduced tumor burden following intraperitoneal implantation compared to
nulliparous
animals. This was associated with a reduction in
tumor-associated neutrophils and macrophages, as well as in the
expression
levels of their chemoattractants (Cxcl1, Cxcl5) in
the OFB and PSF. These findings define a pre-existing "parity-associated
microenvironmental niche" in the OFB that is
refractory to metastatic tumor seeding and outgrowth. Future studies
designed
to manipulate this niche may provide a novel means
to mitigate peritoneal dissemination of ovarian cancer.
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