| Literature DB >> 17626183 |
Sven Rottenberg1, Anders O H Nygren, Marina Pajic, Fijs W B van Leeuwen, Ingrid van der Heijden, Koen van de Wetering, Xiaoling Liu, Karin E de Visser, Kenneth G Gilhuijs, Olaf van Tellingen, Jan P Schouten, Jos Jonkers, Piet Borst.
Abstract
We have studied in vivo responses of "spontaneous" Brca1- and p53-deficient mammary tumors arising in conditional mouse mutants to treatment with doxorubicin, docetaxel, or cisplatin. Like human tumors, the response of individual mouse tumors varies, but eventually they all become resistant to the maximum tolerable dose of doxorubicin or docetaxel. The tumors also respond well to cisplatin but do not become resistant, even after multiple treatments in which tumors appear to regrow from a small fraction of surviving cells. Classical biochemical resistance mechanisms, such as up-regulated drug transporters, appear to be responsible for doxorubicin resistance, rather than alterations in drug-damage effector pathways. Our results underline the promise of these mouse tumors for the study of tumor-initiating cells and of drug therapy of human cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17626183 PMCID: PMC1914039 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0702955104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205