| Literature DB >> 21867536 |
Robert K Dearth1, Isere Kuiatse, Yu-Fen Wang, Lan Liao, Susan G Hilsenbeck, Powel H Brown, Jianming Xu, Adrian V Lee.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epidemiological evidence suggests that moderately elevated levels of circulating insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) are associated with increased risk of breast cancer in women. How circulating IGF-I may promote breast cancer incidence is unknown, however, increased IGF-I signaling is linked to trastuzumab resistance in ErbB2 positive breast cancer. Few models have directly examined the effect of moderately high levels of circulating IGF-I on breast cancer initiation and progression. The purpose of this study was to assess the ability of circulating IGF-I to independently initiate mammary tumorigenesis and/or accelerate the progression of ErbB2 mediated mammary tumor growth.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21867536 PMCID: PMC3189189 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-11-377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Liver specific transgene overexpression of IGF-I results in increased levels of circulating IGF-I and increased body weight. A.) Overexpression of liver IGF-I (black bar) resulted in a significant (p < 0.01) increase in female serum levels of IGF-I measured at 6 weeks of age compared to mice without the TTR-IGF-I transgene (white bar). B.) Females expressing the IGF-I transgene exhibited significantly (p < 0.05) larger body weights at 7, 10-12 weeks of age due to increased circulating IGF-I compared to wt/ErbB2 only controls. No transgene = wt + ErbB2 only females; IGF-I Transgene = TTR-IGF-I transgenic + TTR-IGF-I-ErbB2 bigenic females. N for each group is represented within their respective bars. N = 30 animals per group for weight. ** p < 0.01; * p < 0.05.
Figure 2Increased circulating levels of IGF-I had no effect on pubertal mammary gland growth. Representative whole mounts of wild type (wt) and IGF-I transgenic (TTR-IGF-I) mammary glands at 4 wks (top 2 panels), 6 wks (middle 2 panels), and 9 wks of age (bottom 2 panels). N = 20 per group at 4 wks of age; N = 4 for WT and N = 7 for TG at 6 wks of age; N = 7 for WT and N = 8 for TG at 9 wks of age. WT = wild type and TG = TTR-IGF-I.
Analysis of Mammary Gland Growth
| Group | Wild Type (control) | Transgenic (TTR-IGF-I) |
|---|---|---|
| Average. % Fat Pad Filled | 26% | 28% |
| Average. % Fat Pad Filled | 80% | 87% |
| Average. % Fat Pad Filled | 82% | 82% |
There was no difference in mammary gland development compared to age-matched wild types at 4, 6 and 9 weeks of age as determined by percent of the mammary fat pad filled with the ductal tree. N = 20 for WT and TG at 4 wks of age; N = 4 for WT and 7 for TG at 6 wks of age; N = 7 for WT and N = 8 for TG at 9 wks of age. WT = wild type and TG = TTR-IGF-I
Figure 3Increased levels of circulating IGF-I does not initiate mammary tumorigenesis. A.) Kaplan-Meier tumor curve illustrating the percent of animals without mammary gland tumors vs. the day tumors were first palpated. Increased IGF-I had no effect on ErbB2 initiated mammary tumorigenesis (p = 0.59). Additionally, the moderate increase in circulating IGF-I did not induced mammary tumors in females expressing only the IGF-I transgene (purple) compared to controls (maroon line). B.) Increased circulating levels on IGF-I resulted in significantly higher (p < 0.05) IGF-I protein levels in tumors from bigenic females compared to tumors in ErbB2 transgenics (right panel). Middle panel shows IGF-I protein levels measured in contralateral normal mammary glands from these same bigenic and ErbB2 transgenic females. Left panel shows a significant increase (p < 0.05) in serum IGF-I in these same bigenic females compared to ErbB2 transgenics. Bars indicate the mean (±SEM) serum or protein levels of IGF-I assayed by ELISA. N = indicated with bars; MG = Mammary Gland; ErbB2 = ErbB2 transgenic only; Bigenic = TTR-IGF-I-ErbB2; MTTF (mean time to tumor formation) = weeks/days/months; * = p < 0.05.
Figure 4Increased circulating IGF-I does not alter growth in ErbB2-induced mammary gland turmors. Graphs plotting individual tumor growth curves for ErbB2 (left) and bigenic (right) females. Statistical analysis revealed that increased circulating levels of IGF-I (right) had no significant (p = 0.23) affect on mammary tumor growth compared to ErbB2 only induced mammary tumors. N = 16 for ErbB2 group and 15 for TTR-IGF-I-ErbB2 bigenic group.
Comparing Groups: End of study tumor summary
| ErbB2 | Bigenic | IGF-I | Wild Type | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of Tumors | 19(20) = 95% | 19(21) = 90% | 0(25) | 0(22) |
| Mean Time to Tumor Formation (MTTF) | 224 days 30 wks/7.5 m | 233 days 33 wks/8.3 m | NA | NA |
| Average Number of Tumors per Animal | 2.2 (11) = 55% | 2.3 (13) = 60% | NA | NA |
Number of tumors = animals that got mammary tumors (total number of animals) %- percentage of animals with mammary tumors per group; Average number of tumors per animal = average number of mammary gland tumors per animal (number of animals with multiple tumors), %- percentage of animals with multiple tumors per group. NA = not applicable. ErbB2 = MMTV-ErbB2 transgenic; Bigenic = TTR-IGF-I-ErbB2 bigenic; IGF-I = TTR-IGF-I transgenic; Wild Type = control; wks = weeks; m = months.
Figure 5Increased levels of circulating IGF-I have no effect on tumor type or mammary gland signaling. A.) Representative H&E staining of mammary tumors promoted by MMTV-ErbB2 (top) or TTR-IGF-I-ErbB2 bigenic (bigenic-bottom). Both groups had similar tumor phenotypes which were predominantly adenocarcinomas. B.) Representative immunoblot of phosphorylated (p) and total (T) AKT and Erk ½ signaling in normal mammary glands (M) and tumors (T). *** = p < 0.001; Magnification: 40 ×. C = representative wild type females; I = representative TTR-IGF-I transgenic females