| Literature DB >> 27171151 |
Sarah Beth White1,2, Daniele Procissi2, Jeane Chen2,3, Venkateswara Rao Gogineni1, Patrick Tyler2, Yihe Yang2, Reed A Omary4, Andrew C Larson2,5,6.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Surgical resection of colorectal liver metastases is not achievable in more than 70% of the cases. Although the liver directed therapies have become a part of the stand of care, lack of a preclinical model impedes the assessment of toxicity and therapeutic benefits attributed several candidate drugs or treatment regimens that can be designed. In the present study we aim develop and characterize a rat colorectal liver metastasis model.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27171151 PMCID: PMC4865145 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Tumor inoculation.
Using a 29 G needle, 5*106 CC-531 cells in a cellular suspension were injected into the anterior subcapsular left hepatic lobe.
Fig 2Ultrasound and Gross Pathology.
(a) Transverse ultrasound images demonstrates a well-defined hypoehoic tumor in the anterior aspect of the left hepatic lobe. (b) Explanted gross specimen reveals tumors corresponding to the lesions seen on US (arrow heads).
Fig 3Histology and Immunohistochemisty.
(a) H&E staining was performed confirming tumors within the liver. Microvessel density was evaluated with CD31 staining (b) 2.5x, (c) 20x. Scale bars represent 2 mm.
Fig 4MR imaging.
Coronal contrast enhanced MRI images for the same rat at 8 and 16 days post injection of tumor cells, demonstrating rapid increase in tumor volume.
Fig 5Quantitative MRI.
Shown in (a) and (b) are two adjacent coronal slices of a representative rat liver with advanced stage tumor. Tumor lobes are identifiable as hyperintense relative to adjacent normal liver tissue within T2-weighted anatomic images. Shown In panels (c)–(h) are the corresponding parametric maps produced from dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) image series. (f)These depict the vascular volume and permeability of tissues within the tumor region. R2* difference map from gas-challenge BOLD MR studies in this tumor model are shown in panel; significant heterogeneity in both gas-challenge signal changes and quantitative DCE measurements suggest a heterogeneous tumor microenvironment with regional variations in perfusion, tissue oxygenation and blood volume.
Fig 6Irreversible Electroportation Therapy.
Representative coronal T2 weighted MR images from two Wistar rats prior to IRE (A.I) and 7 days post IRE (A.II). White arrows = control tumors, and dashed arrows = tumors that under went IRE.