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  3. A new aggressive xenograft model of human colon cancer using cancer-associated fibroblasts.
 

A new aggressive xenograft model of human colon cancer using cancer-associated fibroblasts.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.145099
Publisher DOI
10.7717/peerj.9045
PubMed ID
32547853
Description
Background

Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death. Almost half of the patients present recurrence within 5 years after the treatment of the primary tumor, the majority, with metastasis. On the other hand, in the search for new animal models that simulate metastatic cancer, it has been suggested that fibroblasts immersed in the peritumoral stroma (cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs)), play a relevant role in the development of cancer. The objective of this study was to identify an adequate animal model to study metastatic colon cancer and the application of new treatments.

Methods

Human CAFs and normal fibroblasts (NF) for transplant and culture were obtained from surgical fresh samples of patients with adenocarcinoma of sigmoid colon. Stromal cell purity was evaluated by morphology and immunostaining with vimentin (VIM) as a fibroblast marker and anti-proColXIα1 as a specific human CAF marker. Phenotypic characterization of cultured stromal cells was performed by co-staining with mesenchymal and epithelial cell markers. For identification in mice, human CAFs were labeled with the PKH26 red fluorescence dye. Cell line HT-29 was used as tumor cells. Transplant in the head of the pancreas of 34 SCID mice was performed in four different groups, as follows: I. 150,000 CAFS (n = 12), IIa. 1.5 million HT29 cells (n = 7), IIb. 150,000 NF+1.5 million HT29 cells (n = 5), III. 150,000 CAFS+1.5 million HT29 cells (n = 10). After euthanasia performed one month later, histological analysis was made using hematoxylin-eosin and anti-proColXIα1. A histopathological score system based on three features (tumor volume, desmoplasia and number of metastasized organs) was established to compare the tumor severity.

Results

The CAFs and NF cultured were proColXIα1+/VIM+, proColXIα1/alphaSMA+ and proColXIα1+/CK19+ in different proportions without differences among them, but the CAFs growth curve was significantly larger than that of the NF (p < 0.05). No tumor developed in those animals that only received CAFs. When comparing group II (a + b) vs. group III, both groups showed 100% hepatic metastases. Median hepatic nodules, tumor burden, lung metastases and severity score were bigger in group III vs group II (a + b), although without being significant, except in the case of the median tumor volume, that was significantly higher in group III (154.8 (76.9-563.2) mm3) vs group II (46.7 (3.7-239.6) mm3), p = 0.04. A correlation was observed between the size of the tumor developed in the pancreas and the metastatic tumor burden in the liver and with the severity score.

Conclusion

Our experiments demonstrate that cultured CAFs have a higher growth than NF and that when human CAFs are associated to human tumor cells, larger tumors with liver and lung metastases are generated than if only colon cancer cells with/without NF are transplanted. This emphasizes the importance of the tumor stroma, and especially the CAFs, in the development of cancer.
Date of Publication
2020-06-03
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
500 Science > 570 Life sciences; biology
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
Animal model CAFs Fibroblasts culture ProColXIα1 Xenograft
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Fernando-Macías, Ester
Fernández-García, Maria Teresa
García-Pérez, Eva
Porrero Guerrero, Belén
López-Arévalo, Camilo
Rodríguez-Uría, Raquel
Sanz-Navarro, Sandra
Vázquez-Villa, José Fernando
Muñíz-Salgueiro, María Carmen
Suárez-Fernández, Laura
Galván Hernández, José Albertoorcid-logo
Institut für Pathologie, Translational Research Unit
Barneo-Caragol, Clara
García-Ocaña, Marcos
de Los Toyos, Juan R
Barneo-Serra, Luis
Additional Credits
Institut für Pathologie, Translational Research Unit
Series
PeerJ
ISSN
2167-8359
Access(Rights)
open.access
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