| Literature DB >> 28499452 |
Yunxin Lai1,2, Xinru Wei1,2, Shouheng Lin1,2, Le Qin1,2, Lin Cheng1,2, Peng Li3,4,5.
Abstract
Cancers remain a major public health problem worldwide, which still require profound research in both the basic and preclinical fields. Patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models are created when cancerous cells or tissues from patients' primary tumors are implanted into immunodeficient mice to simulate human tumor biology in vivo, which have been extensively used in cancer research. The routes of implantation appeared to affect the outcome of PDX research, and there has been increasing applications of patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (PDOX) models. In this review, we firstly summarize the methodology to establish PDX models and then go over recent application and function of PDX models in basic cancer research on the areas of cancer characterization, initiation, proliferation, metastasis, and tumor microenvironment and in preclinical explorations of anti-cancer targets, drugs, and therapeutic strategies and finally give our perspectives on the future prospects of PDX models.Entities:
Keywords: Basic; Cancer research; Drugs; PDX models; Preclinical
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28499452 PMCID: PMC5427553 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-017-0470-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1Overview of the methodology to establish PDX models and their uses in cancer research. Tumors from cancer patients (P0) are fragmented or digested into single-cell suspension and then transplanted (directly or with additives such as Matrigel) into immunodeficient mice (P1) for engraftment. Once grown, the tumors were transplanted into secondary recipients (P2) for tumor expansion. The expanded tumors can then be cryopreserved or transplanted into P3 mice for cancer research of the type of origin. Specifically, tumors can be transplanted into the sites other than that the tumors are derived, called heterotopic transplantation or into the corresponding sites of the tumors like the brain [39, 97], lung [130], liver [12], pancreas [131, 132], kidney [26],and ovary [11], which is called orthotopic transplantation. The successfully established PDX models are to be used in cancer research, which consists of two, basic and preclinical, arms. Basic and preclinical cancer research in PDX models are connected with each other, as basic research can identify therapeutic targets or strategies for preclinical tests and preclinical research can generate new basic questions
Fig. 2Use of PDX models in drug screening and preclinical therapeutic evaluation. Drug screening: PDX models can be used to expand tumors derived patients without adequate initial tumors for in vitro studies. The expanded tumor cells can be cultured and manipulated ex vivo and used for high-throughput screening of drugs or combinations. Identified candidate drugs and combinations can be further evaluated in PDX mice before use in patients or directly used in patients if the drugs have been approved. Preclinical therapeutic evaluation: given different clinical therapeutic regimens are available for cancer patients, PDX models can be used to define the best for individual patients. Briefly, the PDX mice of one patient are randomly divided into certain groups and treated with different therapeutic regimens. Through tumor assessment, the best regimen can be identified
Representative potential therapeutic drugs and their targets in various types of cancers that have been assessed by xenograft models [133]
| Drug or combination | Target | Cancer type | Mouse | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DEL-22379 | Erk | Colorectal cancer | NOD/SCID | [ |
| CSL362 | CD123 | AML | NSG | [ |
| Bicalutamide | Androgen | Prostate cancer | SCID | [ |
| FP3 | VEGF | Colon cancer | Nude | [ |
| Pyruvinium pamoate | Glutathione | Lymphoma | NOG | [ |
| Ponatinib, dovitinib, and BGJ398 | FGFR | Cholangiocarcinoma | NSG | |
| Luteolin | cMet | Gastric cancer | Nude | [ |
| BKM120 | PI3K inhibitor | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma | NSG | [ |
| Erlotinib and gefitinib | EGFR | Chordomas | Nude | [ |
| Salmonella A1-R | - | Melanoma | Nude | [ |
| Salmonella A1-R and doxorubicin | - | Sarcoma | Nude | [ |
| Trastuzumab | Her2 | Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | Nude and SCID | [ |
| Trastuzumab/cetuximab | Her2/EGFR | Gastric cancer | Nude | [ |
| Cetuximab/bevacizumab | EGFR/VEGF | Colon cancer | Nude | [ |
| Cetuximab | EGFR | Lung Adenocarcinoma | NOD/SCID | [ |
| AZD5363 | AKT | Gastric cancer | Nude | [ |
| Brequinar | Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase | AML | SCID | [ |
| GSK2879552 | LSD1, lysine demethylase 1 | Small cell lung cancer | Nude | [ |
| Anti-CD47 antibody | CD47 | Non-Hodgkin lymphoma | NSG | [ |
| CHZ868 | JAK2 | B-ALL | NSG | [ |
| HA15 | Bip | Melanoma | nude | [ |
| UNC0379 | SETD8 | Neuroblastoma | Nude | [ |
| PARP inhibitors and β-lapachone | DNA repair | Pancreatic cancer and NSCLC | NOD/SCID | [ |
| MCB-613 | Steroid Receptor Coactivator | Breast cancer (MCF-7) | Nude | [ |
| P5091 | USP7 | Multiple myeloma | SCID | [ |
| MLN8237 and ABT-199 | Aurora kinase and BCL-2 | Neuroblastoma | SCID | [ |
| TH287 and TH588 | MTH1 | Melanoma | NOG | [ |
| Agonists | HIF-2 | Renal cell carcinoma | Nude | [ |
| SSR128129E (SSR) | FGFR | Lewis lung carcinoma | Nude | [ |
| CH5424802 | ALK | NSCLC | SCID or nude | [ |
| ON01910 | Plk1 | Liver, breast, and pancreatic cancers | Nude | [ |
| Shepherdin | ATP pocket of Hsp90 | Prostate cancer | SCID and beige | [ |
| PD0325901 | MEK | BRAF mutant cancer | Nude | [ |
| Monoclonal antibody | S1P | Multiple cancers | Nude | [ |
| NSC23766 | Rac | P210-BCR-ABL positive CML | NOD/SCID | [ |
| Argyrin A | Proteasome | Colon cancer | Nude | [ |
| Syk inhibitors | Syk | AML | NOG | [ |
| Polyphenylureas | XIAP, an apoptosis suppressor | Prostate and colon cancers | Nude | [ |
| RD162 and MDV3100 | Androgen | Advanced prostate cancer | SCID | [ |
| EPI-001 | Androgen receptor NTD domain | Castrate-recurrent prostate cancer | NOD/SCID | [ |
| piperlongumine | Stress response to ROS | Multiple cancers | nude | [ |
| CFI-400945, inhibitor | PLK4 | Multiple cancers | NSG and SCID | [ |
| BDA-366 | Bcl2 BH4 domain | Lung cancer | Nude | [ |
| CCT196969, CCT241161 | pan-RAF and SFKs | Multiple cancers | Nude | [ |
| SR9243, LXR inverse agonist | LXR | Multiple cancers | Nude | [ |
| SHP099 | SHP2 | RTK-driven cancer | Nude | [ |
| Antibody | RSPO3 | Colorectal cancer | Nude | [ |
| CB-5083 | AAA ATPase p97 | Multiple myeloma and solid tumors | Nude and SCID-Beige | [ |
| BI-505 | ICAM-1 | B cell cancer and MM | SCID | [ |
| MLN4924 | NEDD8-Activating Enzyme | Multiple cancers | SCID | [ |
| Selinexor (KPT-330) | XPO1 | AML | NSG | [ |
| Matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor prinomastat (AG3340) | Matrix metalloproteinase | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | SCID | [ |