| Literature DB >> 35327469 |
Natasha N Knier1,2, Sierra Pellizzari3, Jiangbing Zhou4, Paula J Foster1,2, Armen Parsyan3,5,6,7.
Abstract
Breast cancer remains a leading cause of mortality among women worldwide. Brain metastases confer extremely poor prognosis due to a lack of understanding of their specific biology, unique physiologic and anatomic features of the brain, and limited treatment strategies. A major roadblock in advancing the treatment of breast cancer brain metastases (BCBM) is the scarcity of representative experimental preclinical models. Current models are predominantly based on the use of animal xenograft models with immortalized breast cancer cell lines that poorly capture the disease's heterogeneity. Recent years have witnessed the development of patient-derived in vitro and in vivo breast cancer culturing systems that more closely recapitulate the biology from individual patients. These advances led to the development of modern patient-tissue-based experimental models for BCBM. The success of preclinical models is also based on the imaging technologies used to detect metastases. Advances in animal brain imaging, including cellular MRI and multimodality imaging, allow sensitive and specific detection of brain metastases and monitoring treatment responses. These imaging technologies, together with novel translational breast cancer models based on patient-derived cancer tissues, represent a unique opportunity to advance our understanding of brain metastases biology and develop novel treatment approaches. This review discusses the state-of-the-art knowledge in preclinical models of this disease.Entities:
Keywords: animal imaging; brain metastasis; breast cancer; multimodal imaging; patient-derived xenografts; preclinical animal models
Year: 2022 PMID: 35327469 PMCID: PMC8945440 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10030667
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Preclinical models for studies of breast cancer brain metastases.
| Cell Type | Origin | Subtype | Animal Model | Injection Method | Detection Method | Drugs Studied | Original Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| MDA-MB-361 | Brain metastasis | ER+/PR+/HER2+ | Nude mice | Intracarotid | Histology | Docetaxel, doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide [ | [ |
| MDA-MB-468 | Pleural effusion | TNBC | Nude mice | Intracarotid | Histology | Docetaxel [ | [ | |
| MA11 | Bone marrow aspirate | TNBC | BALB/C nu/nu nude mice | Intracardiac | Autopsy, Histology, and MRI | Ionizing radiation and trichostatin A (HDAC inhibitor) [ | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231BR | Pleural effusion | TNBC | Nude mice | Intracardiac | Histology | Vorinostat [ | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231BR1, -BR2, -BR3 | Pleural effusion | TNBC | Athymic NCr-nu/nu mice | Intracarotid | Histology | PTK787/Z 222584 [ | [ | |
| MDA-MB- 231-BrM2 | Pleural effusion | TNBC | Athymic nude mice | Intracardiac | BLI, MRI, | GDC-0068 [ | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231BR-HER2+ | Pleural effusion, then brain metastases in mice | ER-/PR-/HER2+ | BALB/c nude mice | Intracardiac | Immunofluorescence | Lapatinib [ | [ | |
| CN34-BrM2 | Pleural effusion | TNBC | Beige nude mice | Intracardiac | BLI, MRI, | mTOR inhibitors (rapamycin, Temsirolimus-CCI-779) [ | [ | |
| JIMT-1-BR3 | Pleural effusion | HER2+ | NRC nu/nu mice | Intracardiac | Histology | Temozolomide [ | [ | |
| SUM190-BR3 | Primary tumor | HER2+ | Athymic NIH nu/nu mice | Intracardiac | Immunofluorescence | N/A | [ | |
| BT474.br/Br.2/Br.3 | Primary tumor | ER+/PR+/HER2+ | Swiss nude mice | Intracarotid | Confocal microscopy, Immunofluorescence | Vardenafil and trastuzumab [ | [ | |
| SKBrM3+ | Plural effusion | ER-/PR-/HER2+ | Athymic nude mice | Mammary fat pad | BLI, Histology | Cabozantinib and Neratinib [ | [ | |
|
| Br7-C5 | N-ethyl-N nitrosourea-induced mammary adenocarci- noma | Unspecified | Berlin–Druckrey IV rat | Intracardiac | Histology | N/A | [ |
| 4T1BM | Murine mammary carcinoma | TNBC | Syngeneic BALB/c mice | Mammary fat pad | Histology | N/A | [ | |
| 4T1Br4 | Murine mammary carcinoma | TNBC | Syngeneic BALB/c mice | Mammary fat pad | Histology | Trebananib [ | [ | |
| 4T1-Luc | Murine mammary carcinoma | TNBC | Syngeneic BALB/c mice | Intracranial, intracardiac, spontaneous | BLI | Fluphenazine hydrochloride [ | [ | |
| TBCP-1 | Spontaneous BALB/C mammary tumor | ER-/PR-/HER2+ | Syngeneic BALB/C mice | Intracardiac | Histology | Neratinib [ | [ | |
|
| F2-7 | Patient brain metastases | TNBC | NSG mice | Intracardiac | BLI | N/A | [ |
| Brain-orthotopic PDXs | Patient brain metastases | TNBC and ER+ varied | NSG mice | Intracranial (pipette method) | Histology | N/A | [ | |
| BM-E22-1 | Patient brain metastases | TNBC | NSG mice | Intracardiac | MRI | N/A | [ | |
| DF-BM#Ni7, DF-BM#656 | Patient brain metastases | ER+ HER2+ (DF-BM#Ni7), TNBC (DF-BM#656) | NOD/SCID mice | Intracarotid (ligation method) | BLI | N/A | [ | |
| WHIM 2/WHIM5 | Primary tumor/patient brain metastases | TNBC | NOD/SCID mice | Mammary fat pad | Histology | Carboplatin, cyclophosphamide, bortezomib, dacarbazine [ | [ | |
| PDX1435/PDX2147 | Patient brain metastases (PDX1435), primary tumor (PDX 2147) | TNBC | NOD/SCID mice | Intracranial | MRI | BCF [ | [ | |
| Orthotopic HER2+ PDXs | Patient brain metastases | HER2+, ER/PR status varied | NOD/SCID mice | Intracranial | BLI, MRI | Combination of PI3K inhibitor (BKM120) and mTORC1 inhibitor (RAD001) [ | [ | |
| Subcutaneous PDXs | Patient brain metastases | Unspecified | SCID BALB/c mice | Subcutaneous (trocar method) | PET/CT | N/A | [ |
Abbreviations: Bagg Albino (BALB), bioluminescence imaging (BLI), breast cancer specific frequencies (BCF), computerized tomography (CT), dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT), estrogen receptor (ER), histone deacetylases (HDAC), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR), NOD/SCID/Gamma (NSG), nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID), positron emission tomography (PET), progesterone receptor (PR), severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), triple negative breast cancer (TNBC).
Figure 1Establishment of breast cancer brain metastasis from immortalized breast cancer cell lines. (I) Immortalized breast cancer cell lines are established from breast cancer primary tumors or metastases or (II) spontaneously developed breast cancer in the mouse model. Cells are then cultured in vitro (a) and introduced into mice (b) with the goal of developing brain metastasis. In some models, formed brain metastases are then dissociated to single cells and passaged in vitro (c) to generate a brain-seeking clone and then are reintroduced into the animal (d). Often multiple re-passaging cycles are used to establish brain-seeking clones until an efficient BCBM mouse model is generated (e) (see text). Created with BioRender.com.
Figure 2Methods of introduction of cancer cells into an experimental animal to generate breast cancer brain metastatic models. Various introduction methods applied for (a) xenogeneic models, (b) syngeneic models, and (c) patient-derived xenograft models are presented (see text). Breast cancer cells are most commonly introduced into mice via intracranial, intracarotid, intracardiac, or mammary fat pad injections or implantation. More sophisticated approaches, such as ligation of the external and common carotid arteries during intracarotid injection, intracranial transplantation using pipette tip through burr hole, and bilateral subcutaneous injection using a trocar have also been described for PDX models. Created with BioRender.com.
Figure 3Schematic of in vivo imaging methodologies. Breast cancer brain metastasis models can be imaged with fluorescence imaging (FLI), bioluminescence imaging (BLI), positron emission tomography (PET), computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or combinations of these techniques (multimodality imaging) (see text for details). In FLI and BLI, cells are labeled with reporters and introduced into the animal. Substrates are then used to detect a bioluminescent signal in BLI, while no substrates are required for FLI. In PET imaging, radiotracers conjugated to a substrate (see text and Table 2) are used. In targeted PET imaging, radiotracers can be conjugated to antibodies against specific molecules expressed by cancer cells to improve sensitivity and specificity of detection of the metastases. CT and MRI can often use contrast enhancing molecules such as iodine (CT) or gadolinium (MRI) to improve image contrast and detection. MRI can also utilize iron particles (iron-based MRI) to improve cellular detection and allow for monitoring of the arrest, growth, and retention of cancer cells in vivo. Created with BioRender.com.
Imaging modalities used for detection of BCBM in animal models.
| Imaging Modality | Principles | Reporters /Detection Used | SR/S/HS/Sp | Information | Advantages | Disadvantages and Limitations for Imaging |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Optical detection of light emitted from BLI reporters. | Genetically expressed proteins such as luciferase | SR—~1 mm | Probe uptake, cell presence, and cell viability. | Minimally invasive, inexpensive, allows for signal quantification, whole mouse imaging and has high throughput. BLI signal is only produced by viable cancer cells permitting distinction between viable and dead cells. | Requires stable transfection of the reporter into cancer cells and injection of substrate into a mouse a. Limited depth penetration and therefore, not clinically translatable. Challenging to determine depth of a tumor within the body based on the signal. False negative effects can occur in areas where the substrate cannot easily accumulate, such as the brain, or in tumors with compromised vasculature. Probe uptake in the brain and limited imaging depth in biological tissues. |
|
| Optical detection of light emitted from fluorescent reporters. | GFP, eGFP, EYFP, mCherry, TagRFP, Dendra2, tdTomato. | SR—~1 mm | Probe uptake, cell presence and cell viability. | Minimally invasive, inexpensive, allows for whole mouse imaging and has high throughput. Does not require injection of substrate. The signal is quantifiable. | Requires stable transfection/transduction of the reporter into cancer cells and excitation by an external light source. Background autofluoresence decreases sensitivity. Challenging to determine depth of a tumor within the body based on the signal. Probe uptake in the brain and limited imaging depth in biological tissues. |
|
| Combinations of multiple X-ray measurements taken from different angles to produce tomographic images. With a contrast agent, CT images can reveal the location and density of vessels (early), and contrast agent accumulation in the tissue (late). | Iodine-containing polymers [ | SR—~ 100 um | Tomographic images, vessel density, and agent accumulation. | Low cost, fast acquisition and high spatial resolution of 3D volumes. | Radiation exposure, low contrast can make certain pathologies difficult to discern; contrast-enhanced micro-CT is more commonly applied. Low contrast does not allow for visualization of tumor detail, often needs contrast enhancement. |
|
| Detection of γ rays from positron emitting radioisotopes b. | FDG, | SR—~1 mm | Tracer uptake; biological and biochemical. Direct cell quantification, and signal specific to cells. | Can monitor tissue metabolism (glycolysis, DNA synthesis, amino acid transport and oxygenation state) in brain metastases, with excellent depth penetration. | Requires tracers, normal brain tissue has a high rate of glucose metabolism and therefore high FDG accumulation which decreases specificity. Signal decays over time (t1/2), and cells are exposed to radioactivity. Low radiotracer uptake in brain. |
|
| Detection of water proton relaxation after RF absorption. | See below. | SR—500–2000 microns | Anatomical information, morphology, and tissue composition. | No ionizing radiation exposure, provides excellent soft tissue contrast. | Potential tissue heating during long scans, risk of peripheral nerve stimulation, sensitive to motion. Poor sensitivity in detecting micrometastases. |
|
| MRI with use of contrast agents, administered to improve signal differences between normal and cancerous tissue. | Most common contrasts—gadolinium-based, manganese-based. | SR—500–2000 microns | Improved visibility of tumors, inflammation, and blood supply. | No radiation exposure. Clinically, dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) MRI can be used to image the tumor vasculature by acquiring sequential images during the passage of gadolinium through tissues and provides quantitative measures of perfusion, permeability and blood volume. | Requires administration of contrast. Heterogeneity of metastasis permeability in early and late stages of development. |
|
| Detection of intracellular iron particles via distortion of the magnetic field. | SPIO nanoparticles labeling via co-incubation with cancer cells. | SR—200–1000 | Cell location and presence, including nonproliferative cells. | High sensitivity, non-proliferative, cancer cells do not dilute the SPIO and can be identified by MRI as persistent signal voids by virtue of their retaining iron. | SPIO are diluted in the progeny of proliferative cells and therefore labeled cells become undetectable by MRI after repeated cell divisions. Poor cell quantification. Other structures in brain appear with low signal (i.e., blood, air, bone). |
a For bacteria that produce their own substrate no injection is required. b Frequently used isotopes include fluorine (18F), copper (64Cu), carbon (11C), nitrogen (13N) and oxygen (14O). Abbreviations: 18F-fluoromisonidazole (18F-FMISO), bioluminescence imaging (BLI), 2-[18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG), green fluorescent protein (GFP), computed tomography (CT), dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE), enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP), enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (eYFP), fluorescence imaging (FLI), highest sensitivity reported (HS), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET), sensitivity (S), spatial resolution (SR), specificity (Sp), superparamagnetic iron oxide particles (SPIO), tag red fluorescent protein (TagRFP), tandem dimer tomato (tdTomato).