| Literature DB >> 29339747 |
Rita A Busuttil1,2,3, David S Liu2,4,5, Natasha Di Costanzo1, Jan Schröder6,7, Catherine Mitchell7,8, Alex Boussioutas9,10,11.
Abstract
Gastric cancer is a leading cause of cancer death worldwide, with advanced stage being correlated to the level of tumour invasion and metastasis. Current research is heavily focused on the identification and development of efficacious therapeutics targeting these fundamental hallmarks of cancer, however there are currently no animal models that mimic the invasive phenotypes observed in humans. To address this we have developed an orthotopic mouse model whereby gastric cancer cell lines are tagged with luciferase and injected into the subserosal layer of the stomach. This allows for the monitoring of primary tumour growth and metastasis in real-time as well as quantitation of the degree of tumour invasion through the stomach wall by immunohistochemistry. We have three models based on the degree of invasion and metastasis that are cell line specific: The AGS cells develop into invasive tumours by 4-weeks with no evidence of metastases, MKN45 cells are moderately metastatic with minimal invasion till week 2 and MKN28 cells are highly metastatic and fully invasive by week 1. These models have utility as a tool for testing the efficacy of anti-tumour, anti-invasive and anti-metastatic therapies in the setting of gastric cancer, which currently has poor treatment options.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29339747 PMCID: PMC5770387 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-19025-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Intra-gastric injection procedure. (a) Schematic representation of the intra-gastric injection method. (b) Mice were anaesthetised and placed in a dorsal recumbency position under a dissecting microscope. A 5–10 mm midline incision was then made in the skin overlying the mid abdomen. Forceps and surgical scissors were used to exteriorise the stomach. (c) A 29 G U-100 insulin syringe containing luciferase-tagged cells (500,000) in matrigel (50 ul) was inserted into the serous side of the stomach with the bevel facing up (see inset). (d) With the aid of an assistant the needle was slowly depressed and a matrigel bleb was visible (inset). (e) The stomach is carefully returned to the abdominal cavity and (f) absorbable sutures were used in a 2 step closure process; first the peritoneal layers were closed (g) followed by the skin incision.
Figure 2Experimental profile of mice injected with AGS, MKN45 and MKN28 cells. (a,d,g) Shows an increase in average radiance in mice which developed tumors (over the 6-week experimental period). (b,e,h) Representative images of weekly BLI scanning. (c,f,i) After the final scan mice were euthanized, organs and tissues were removed and imaged ex vivo. Color bar represents light-intensity levels as average radiance (photons/sec/cm2/sr). (1-heart; 2- lung; 3-liver; 4-spleen; 5-stomach; 6-kidney; 7-brain; 8-sex-organs; 9-mesentery; 10-large-intestine; 11-caecum; 12-small-intestine; 13-peritoneum).
Figure 3Quantitation of metastatic and invasive capabilities. To quantitate the extent of invasion stomach sections were stained with an anti-human mitochondrial antibody to identify tumor cells and scored based on extent of invasion. Tumors restricted to the submucosa were scored Stage 0. Invasive tumors that had breached and invaded into the muscularis mucosa or beyond were scored Stage I and II respectively (Supplementary Figs 3 & 4). The percentage of mice represented by these invasion scores are shown for (a) AGS, (b) MKN45 and (c) MKN28 cells. (d) Presence of metastases was validated by IHC and classified as abdominal or thoracic. (e) Representative images of anti-human mitochondrial staining on primary tumour and metastastatic sites from a mouse injected with the MKN28 cell-line at week-6. Scale bar 100 uM.