| Literature DB >> 25926029 |
Claudia Blattmann1,2,3, Markus Thiemann4,5, Albrecht Stenzinger6, Eva K Roth7,8, Anne Dittmar9,10, Hendrik Witt11,12,13, Burkhard Lehner14, Eva Renker15, Manfred Jugold16, Viktoria Eichwald17, Wilko Weichert18,19,20, Peter E Huber21, Andreas E Kulozik22,23,24.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common pediatric primary malignant bone tumor. As the prognosis for patients following standard treatment did not improve for almost three decades, functional preclinical models that closely reflect important clinical cancer characteristics are urgently needed to develop and evaluate new treatment strategies. The objective of this study was to establish an orthotopic xenotransplanted mouse model using patient-derived tumor tissue.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25926029 PMCID: PMC4428092 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-015-0497-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Representative MRI and μCT images of mouse xenografts 4 to 8 weeks after intratibial transplantation of patient-derived human OS tissue showing tibial tumor mass. A): μCT image of whole mouse body 8 weeks after tumor inoculation. B) and C): μCT and T2 weighed (T2w) MRI images of tumor growth from week 4 to week 8. Red arrows indicate tumor location.
Patient characteristics of tissue used for generation of patient-derived orthotopic mouse model
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| diagnosed April 2008 |
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| osteoblastic osteosarcoma |
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| right femur epiphysis, no metastases |
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| according to EURAMOS 1 06/2008 – 11/2009, abortion of chemotherapy after the third postoperative cycle by request of the patient and her parents |
| Extraarticular tumor resection of the right femur (09.09.2008) and implantation of a Mutars-Endoprothesis (regression grade II according to Salzer-Kuntschik) | |
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| diagnosed 24 months after diagnose of primary disease |
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| - osteoblastic osteosarcoma |
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| - multifocal lesions in the right tibia, both lungs bilateral and the mediastinum |
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| - no further treatment because of the significant reduced general conditions and by request of the patient and her parents |
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| 8 weeks after diagnose of relapse |
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| - Oldest child of four children |
| - Youngest brother died because of an embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma in 2000 | |
| - Mother died because of a Mamma-Ca in 2006 | |
| - Father, one younger sister and one younger brother are healthy | |
| - Diagnostic concerning familiar tumor predisposition syndrome was declined |
Figure 2Representative MRI images of T1 weighed (T1w) and T2 weighed (T2w) performed at week 4. A) and B): In T1w MRI images pre and post contrast tumor is not visible. C): Using T2w MRI imaging leasion size of 48 μl (here equaling tumor size) can be discriminated (red arrow).
Figure 3Establishment of patient-derived mouse model. Human OS tissue was transplanted into 6 mice with success rates of 50% in passage 1 (P1), 66% in passage 2 (P2) and 100% in passage 3 (P3). The number of days until tumor onset decreased from 40 (P1) to 30 (P2) to 20 days (P3).
Figure 4Establishment of the primary tumor cell line OS-RH-2011/5. The original tumor tissue was collected and directly cultivated into medium (P1*). After 26 days, cells were split and 3.75 × 106 cells were injected subcutaneously into the left flank of six athymic BALB/c Nu/Nu mice. After three weeks, four of six mice developed a tumor mass, which was removed when reaching a volume of 1.500 mm3. Tumor cells were then passaged in culture (P2*), split after 20 days and again injected into the flank of six mice. After two weeks, all mice developed a tumor mass, which was removed and re-cultured (P3*)
Figure 5Microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization of the human tumor tissue, the three mice passages and the three cell line passages. Primary orthotopic osteosarcoma xenografts and all cell line passages are genomically stable when compared to the tumor in the patient. The mice tumors and the cell line passages showed similar and for osteosarcoma typical copy number aberrations.
Frequent genetic aberrations in osteosarcoma
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| 1p22.3 (BCL10) | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | No variation | Gain / amplification |
| 3q13.31 (LSAMP) | LOH / Del | LOH / Del | No variation | LOH / Del |
| 3p26.1 (SUMF1) | No variation | No variation | LOH / Del | No variation |
| 6p21.1 (RUNX2) | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | No variation | Gain / amplification |
| 7q31.33 (POT1) | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | No variation | Gain / amplification |
| 8q24.21 (Myc) | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification |
| 13q14 (RB1) | LOH / Del | LOH / Del | LOH / Del | LOH / Del |
| 17p13.1 (TP53) | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | No variation | Gain / amplification |
| 17q25.1 (SLC25A19) | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | No variation | Gain / amplification |
| 19q13 (GLTSCR1) | Gain / amplification | Gain / amplification | No variation | Gain / amplification |
Loss of heterozygocity (LOH) was defined as log2 ratio per clone > − 0.25, Amplification was defined as log2 ratio per clone > 0.25.
Figure 6Representative histology of the tumors (Masson trichrom staining). Note the intimate association of neoplastic disorganized, fairly primitive trabeculae (bluish color) with the tumor cells (light red cytoplasm), which either present as lace-like pattern A) or as broad sheets B). The arrows indicate mitosis, (*) indicates neoplastic osteoid. A): Relapsed primary osteosarcoma at the time of diagnosis (×20), B): corresponding patient-derived xenograft of mouse passage P3 (×20). As depicted here, the xenograft tumor closely resembles the relapsed primary including the production of neoplastic bone. Note the abundant mitotic tumor cells (arrows). C): Corresponding patient-derived xenograft of mouse passage P3 at higher magnification (framed detail from B; ×40).