| Literature DB >> 29534457 |
Giuseppina Barutello1, Valeria Rolih2, Maddalena Arigoni3, Lidia Tarone4, Laura Conti5, Elena Quaglino6, Paolo Buracco7, Federica Cavallo8, Federica Riccardo9.
Abstract
Despite several therapeutic advances, malignant melanoma still remains a fatal disease for which novel and long-term curative treatments are needed. The successful development of innovative therapies strongly depends on the availability of appropriate pre-clinical models. For this purpose, several mouse models holding the promise to provide insight into molecular biology and clinical behavior of melanoma have been generated. The most relevant ones and their contribution for the advancement of therapeutic approaches for the treatment of human melanoma patients will be here summarized. However, as models, mice do not recapitulate all the features of human melanoma, thus their strengths and weaknesses need to be carefully identified and considered for the translation of the results into the human clinics. In this panorama, the concept of comparative oncology acquires a priceless value. The revolutionary importance of spontaneous canine melanoma as a translational model for the pre-clinical investigation of melanoma progression and treatment will be here discussed, with a special consideration to the development of innovative immunotherapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: CSPG4; canine melanoma; comparative oncology; immunotherapy; melanoma; pre-clinical models
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29534457 PMCID: PMC5877660 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19030799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Strengths and weaknesses of the translational value of melanoma pre-clinical models.
| Model | Strengths | Weaknesses | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Easy to handle Major reproducibility |
Lack of three-dimensional architecture Absence of interaction with the microenvironment and with the immune system No heterogeneity | |||
|
Specific gene mutation Combination of multiple gene mutations Functional immune system Stepwise tumor progression |
Long latency Incomplete penetrance Different anatomy, physiology and biochemistry compared to human Lack of different genetic background | |||
|
Functional immune system Tumor interaction with the microenvironment Metastasis formation |
Less predictive for the clinical translation Different anatomy, physiology and biochemistry compared to human Not properly reproducing the interactions between cancer cells and the immune system | |||
|
Use of human tumor samples Heterogeneity Metastasis formation Possibilities for “co-clinical trials” Study of drug resistance |
Absence of interactions with the immune system Long latency for tumor growth Different tumor evolution as compared to parental lesion | |||
|
Shared environment with humans Spontaneous tumor formation Functional immune system Recurrence and metastasis Different genetic background |
Poor knowledge and understanding of the immune system |
Figure 1Most relevant achievements in the melanoma onco-immunology field obtained in (a) genetically engineered mouse models (GEMM); (b) immunodeficient mice xenotransplanted with human cell lines or patient-derived tumors (PDXs); (c) immunocompetent mice challenged with syngeneic B16 cells; (d) canine patients affected by spontaneous melanoma.