| Literature DB >> 31731753 |
Enya Li1,2, Li Lin1, Chia-Wei Chen1, Da-Liang Ou1,3,4.
Abstract
Liver cancer is one of the dominant causes of cancer-related mortality, and the survival rate of liver cancer is among the lowest for all cancers. Immunotherapy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has yielded some encouraging results, but the percentage of patients responding to single-agent therapies remains low. Therefore, potential directions for improved immunotherapies include identifying new immune targets and checkpoints and customizing treatment procedures for individual patients. The development of combination therapies for HCC is also crucial and urgent and, thus, further studies are required. Mice have been utilized in immunotherapy research due to several advantages, for example, being low in cost, having high success rates for inducing tumor growth, and so on. Moreover, immune-competent mice are used in immunotherapy research to clarify the role that the immune system plays in cancer growth. In this review paper, the advantages and disadvantages of mouse models for immunotherapy, the equipment that are used for monitoring HCC, and the cell strains used for inducing HCC are reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: hepatocellular carcinoma; immunotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31731753 PMCID: PMC6896030 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11111800
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Murine models for immunotherapy studies of HCC. (A) Syngeneic mouse models: Mouse tumor cells are implanted in immune-competent mice. (B) Chemotoxic agent mouse models: Chemicals are administered to induce HCC growth. (C) Genetically engineered mouse models: Tumor suppressor gene deletion or oncogene activation is built into mice. (D) Human cell line and patient-derived xenograft in humanized mouse models: Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) or human CD34+ cells are given to immunodeficient mice. (PDX, patient-derived xenografts; Hu-PBL, PBMC-humanized mouse model; HSC, hematopoietic stem cells).
The advantages and disadvantages of murine models for immunotherapy studies of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
| Mouse Model | Advantages | Disadvantages | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Syngeneic | • Not artificial | • Lack of diverse cancer cell line and heterogeneity | [ | |
| • Easy to utilize | • Mostly chemical induced cancer cell line | |||
| • Rapid tumor development | • Tumor does not develop from normal cells or develop in a natural microenvironment | |||
| • Reproducible | • Mouse and human immune systems have vital differences | |||
| • Low in cost | • Might cause a vaccination effect | |||
| • Tumor can be accurately monitored without difficulty | • Human HCC cannot be completely recapitulated by mouse cancer cells in terms of the complexity, histology, and natural carcinogenesis characteristics | |||
| • Non-immunogenic | • Short experimental window | |||
| Chemotoxic agent | • Easy to work with | • Tumor formation is not initiated by chronic inflammation | [ | |
| • Sporadic cancer development | ||||
| • Higher heterogeneity | • Difficult to monitor a tumor | |||
| • Tumors generally progress in a natural microenvironment and develop from normal cells | • Variability in the time for tumor progression | |||
| • Available to incorporate with other approaches for tumor induction | • Larger sample sizes are needed for data interpretation due to the high heterogeneity | |||
| GEMM | • Encompasses natural tumor microenvironments | • Longer latency and time for tumor development | [ | |
| • The genetic and histopathological aspects of all stages of cancer can be recapitulated | • Difficult to monitor a tumor | |||
| • Low immunogenicity | ||||
| • Costly and challenging for breeding and gene manipulation | ||||
| • Tumors develop from normal cells | • Homogeneous in the genomic aspect | |||
| Humanized | CD34+ | • Immediately available for experiment | • 4–8 weeks of experimental window | [ |
| • The complex human immune system and human HCC can be recapitulated | • Difficult to set up | |||
| PBL | • The entire complex human immune system can be established | • 10-12 weeks are required for HSC engraftment | [ | |
| • Difficult to set up | ||||
| • Human HCC can be recapitulated | • High in cost | |||
Mouse models used for immunotherapy in HCC. (CA, chemotoxic agent mouse model; SG, syngeneic mouse model; GEMM, genetically engineered mouse model; HMM, humanized mouse model; DEN, diethylnitrosamine).
| Model | Growth Site | Mice Background | Inducer | Dose | Tumor Harvest | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Orthotopic | C57BL/6 | DEN | 10~35 mg/kg/once | 8~12 months | [ |
| DEN+ thioacetamide | 20 mg/kg/weekly | 2 months | [ | |||
| DEN+ carbon tetrachloride | 8 mL/kg/twice a week | 6 months | [ | |||
| BALB/c | Tamoxifen | 1 mg/mice/once | 4~5 months | [ | ||
|
| Orthotopic | C3H; C57BL/6 | HCA-1; RIL-175 | 1 × 106; 1 × 105 | No data; 3 weeks | [ |
| BALB/c; C57BL/6 | Hepa1 -6; BNL-1MEA | 2 × 106 | 1 week | [ | ||
| Subcutaneous | C57BL/6 | RIL-175 | 1 × 106 | 150 mm3 | [ | |
| BALB/c | BNL-1MEA | 1 × 106 | 200 mm3 | [ | ||
|
| Orthotopic | C57BL/6 | Alb-cre Pten | 9 months | [ | |
| Alb-cre Shp2 | 2 months | [ | ||||
| Akt1−/−,Akt2 −/− | 5~6 months | [ | ||||
| Alb-IKKβ | 20 months | [ | ||||
| Alb-HBV | 28 weeks | [ | ||||
| BALB/c | Alb-floxStop-SV40 | 7(20) weeks | [ | |||
| C57BL/6 | P14 | [ | ||||
|
| Subcutaneous | NSG | Patient-derived tumor | 8~10 weeks | [ |
Figure 2Equipment or methods used for in vivo tumor monitoring. Micro-PET, Micro-CT, MRI, ultrasound, and bioluminescence are the commonly used methods for monitoring tumors non-invasively. Besides the imaging of tumors and surrounding tissues that they can provide, based on their imaging mechanism, other parameters can be provided to determine the status of a tumor. For example, the blood flow and the hypoxic regions can be used to identify the degree of angiogenesis in a tumor. Biopsy (and liquid biopsy) are also methods used for monitoring tumors, with analysis of the cells (tumor or immune cells), proteins, DNA, or any detectable tumor-related marker being used to understand or predict the tumor condition.