| Literature DB >> 32308343 |
Florian Bürtin1, Christina S Mullins2, Michael Linnebacher3.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common diagnosed malignancy among both sexes in the United States as well as in the European Union. While the incidence and mortality rates in western, high developed countries are declining, reflecting the success of screening programs and improved treatment regimen, a rise of the overall global CRC burden can be observed due to lifestyle changes paralleling an increasing human development index. Despite a growing insight into the biology of CRC and many therapeutic improvements in the recent decades, preclinical in vivo models are still indispensable for the development of new treatment approaches. Since the development of carcinogen-induced rodent models for CRC more than 80 years ago, a plethora of animal models has been established to study colon cancer biology. Despite tenuous invasiveness and metastatic behavior, these models are useful for chemoprevention studies and to evaluate colitis-related carcinogenesis. Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMM) mirror the pathogenesis of sporadic as well as inherited CRC depending on the specific molecular pathways activated or inhibited. Although the vast majority of CRC GEMM lack invasiveness, metastasis and tumor heterogeneity, they still have proven useful for examination of the tumor microenvironment as well as systemic immune responses; thus, supporting development of new therapeutic avenues. Induction of metastatic disease by orthotopic injection of CRC cell lines is possible, but the so generated models lack genetic diversity and the number of suited cell lines is very limited. Patient-derived xenografts, in contrast, maintain the pathological and molecular characteristics of the individual patient's CRC after subcutaneous implantation into immunodeficient mice and are therefore most reliable for preclinical drug development - even in comparison to GEMM or cell line-based analyses. However, subcutaneous patient-derived xenograft models are less suitable for studying most aspects of the tumor microenvironment and anti-tumoral immune responses. The authors review the distinct mouse models of CRC with an emphasis on their clinical relevance and shed light on the latest developments in the field of preclinical CRC models. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Carcinogen-induced models; Colorectal cancer; Genetically engineered mouse models; Mouse models; Patient-derived xenografts; Preclinical drug development
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32308343 PMCID: PMC7152519 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v26.i13.1394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Figure 1Overview of the frequently altered pathways in colorectal cancer. The numbers in square brackets label the corresponding model descriptions as given in Table 1.
Overview of genetically engineered mouse models
| 1 | [ | Adenoma formation in the distal rectum in most of the | |
| Colorectal tumor induction by rectal infection with | |||
| 2 | [ | Adenomas: Higher in numbers but smaller in size and no differences in histology compared to | |
| 3 | [ | Shift of tumor distribution, more severe phenotype, invasion of muscularis propria, 50% dead after 12 mo | |
| 4 | [ | Increased survival due to lower number of tumors, but larger tumors predominantly in the colon, 91% at least low-grade adenoma, 50% carcinoma; invasiveness and metastases not reported | |
| 5 | [ | Intestinal polyposis with emphasis on the small intestine | |
| 6 | [ | Transgene expression limited to the large intestine. Adenoma formation without malignancy | |
| 7 | [ | Frameshifted Cre-recombinase with a long guanine nucleotide tract under control of the homeobox promotor | |
| 8 | [ | Increased adenoma formation in the colon, reduced number of polyps in the small intestine | |
| 9 | [ | More severe polyposis compared to | |
| 10 | [ | Increased tumor formation in the large intestine and higher malignancy through increased chromosomal instability (invasiveness and metastases not reported). Note, that | |
| 11 | [ | Reduced tumor formation in the small intestine, but large adenocarcinomas of the colorectum | |
| 12 | [ | Tamoxifen inducible | |
| 13 | [ | long living | Some adenomas progress to adenocarcinomas |
| 14 | [ | C57BL/6J | Hybrid |
| 15 | [ | Change of the | Increased tumor formation in the intestine. 50% adenocarcinomas in the small intestine and 20% in the colon |
| 16 | [ | β-naphthoflavone-inducible Cyp1A promoter | |
| 17 | [ | 6-fold increase of colonic tumor formation compared to | |
| 18 | [ | Increased incidence of colonic adenocarcinomas | |
| 19 | [ | High incidence of well differentiated colonic carcinomas | |
| 20 | [ | 2- to 3-fold increase of tumor formation compared to | |
| 21 | [ | Mainly small intestinal tumor formation | |
| 22 | [ | No increased adenoma formation or malignancy compared to | |
| 23 | [ | No increased malignancy or adenoma formation compared to | |
| 24 | [ | Slight, but not significant, increase in malignancy | |
| 25 | [ | P53 deficiency increases intestinal adenoma multiplicity and malignancy | |
| 26 | [ | Homozygotes die rapidly from lymphoma while heterozygous | |
| 27 | [ | Deletion of | |
| 28 | [ | TDG knockout increases adenoma formation, no carcinomas | |
| 29 | [ | Cytochrome p450 mediated Cre expression in the liver and intestine induced by β-naphthoflavone ( | |
| 30 | [ | Severe debilities in mice with reduced weight and lifespan and anal bulging. | |
| 31 | [ | ||
| 32 | [ | Mice with inducible and reversible | |
| 33 | [ | ||
| 34 | [ | Only adenomas | |
| 35 | [ | Germline embryonic expression of an endogenous | |
| 36 | [ | High embryonic lethality; adult animals succumb to pulmonary neoplasia, no phenotypic changes in the intestine | |
| 37 | [ | Increased number of microadenomas in the proximal colon | |
| 38 | [ | Within 12 wk progression to invasive adenocarcinomas (79%) with 60% lung metastases | |
| 39 | [ | Disruption of TGFβ-signaling leads to locally invasive adenocarcinomas | |
| 40 | [ | AOM-treatment of | Higher incidence of colonic adenomas and adenocarcinomas |
| 41 | [ | Compared to | |
| 42 | [ | Rapid formation of adenomas and adenocarcinomas | |
| 43 | [ | Wnt-independent induction of invasive carcinomas in the intestine with 15% distant metastases | |
| 44 | [ | Mice with inactivation of TGFβR2 combined with loss of PTEN show high number of mucinous adenocarcinomas throughout the intestine. 8% show distant metastases (not Wnt, but deregulation of CDK inhibitor expression). | |
| 45 | [ | ||
| 46 | [ | PTEN is dispensable in the intestinal epithelium, but increases tumorigenesis in the context of APC deficiency | |
| 47 | [ | ||
| 48 | [ | ||
| 49 | [ | Combination of | |
| 50 | [ | Reduced lifespan of 2 months due to rapid tumor development in the distal colon with mixed histology but no metastases | |
| 51 | [ | ||
| 52 | [ | ||
| 53 | [ | Larger tumors, higher incidence of malignant phenotype (compared to | |
| 54 | [ | Adenocarcinomas of the intestine with penetration of the whole intestinal wall and lymphatic spread. Lower tumor burden in C57/BL6 × 129/Sv | |
| 55 | [ | Mosaic | |
| 56 | [ | Constitutional Cre-mediated excision of ß-catenin phosphorylation site leads to a plethora of small intestine adenomas | |
| 57 | [ | Expression of GSK3β-resistant β-catenin leads to substitution of enterocytes by highly proliferative crypt stem cells (rapid death) | |
| 58 | [ | NOTCH-signaling does not influence adenoma formation | |
| 59 | [ | ||
| 60 | [ | Rapid tumor formation in cecum and proximal colon, but high mortality in triple and quadruple mutants | |
| 61 | [ | Rapid tumor formation in the small intestine, early death (2-3 months), more tumors in | |
| 62 | [ | Accelerated tumor formation in the small intestine in MSH2-deficient mice. Mice homozygous for Msh2-/- dye rapidly from lymphomas | |
| 63 | [ | β-naphthoflavone inducible Kras mutation ( | |
| 64 | [ | Villin-controlled | |
| 65 | [ | Death due to lymphoma | |
| 66 | [ | Increased tumor multiplicity and incidence, higher progression to malignancy, high incidence of hematopoietic cancers | |
| 67 | [ | Increased malignancy of intestinal tumors compared to | |
| 68 | [ | Increased tumor incidence and multiplicity, 30% adenocarcinomas, reduced lifespan of 3.3 mo. High amount of extraintestinal tumors | |
| 69 | [ | Reduced life span in hetero- and homozygotes due to lymphomas and gastrointestinal tumors. Tumors show no signs of MSI | |
| 70 | [ | Decreased life span, death due to intestinal adenocarcinomas or lymphomas | |
| 71 | [ | B or T cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, adenomas of the small intestine, basal cell carcinomas | |
| 72 | [ | ||
| 73 | [ | Constitutively active PI3K causes mucinous adenocarcinomas of the proximal colon with infiltration of the whole intestinal wall | |
| 74 | [ | Additional driver mutations do not increase tumor proliferation, but cause progression to adenocarcinoma and metastatic disease | |
| 75 | [ | ||
| 76 | [ | Some invasive adenocarcinomas (13%), dominant negative P53 mutation leads to 60% cancers with 2% metastases. Also, | |
| 77 | [ | ||
| 78 | [ | ||
| 79 | [ | Reduced survival for | |
| 80 | [ | Aggressive carcinomas with metastatic spread to lymph nodes and liver | |
| 81 | [ | Spontaneous adenoma and adenocarcinoma development in the intestine; predominantly in the upper small intestine. Tumorigenesis increased by oxidative stress (KBrO3) |
Figure 2Establishment of PDX. After surgery, a small sample of the tumor, which is not needed for pathological diagnosis, is obtained and cut into pieces of 27 mm3. These can be either implanted immediately in recipient mice or vitally cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen. The resulting patient-derived xenograft (b) closely reflects the histology of the donor tumor (a) (Previously published in[229]). Patient-derived xenograft can be further processed for subsequent implantation or cryopreservation.