Selective portal vein injection for the design of syngeneic models of liver malignancy.

Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol

Laboratory of the Swiss Hepato-Pancreatico-Biliary (HPB) and Transplantation Center, Department of Surgery, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; and

Published: May 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Liver metastases from colorectal cancer (CRC) are a leading cause of mortality, making effective research models essential.
  • A new method called selective portal vein injection allows for the creation of syngeneic orthotopic liver tumor models, limiting tumor growth to specific liver lobes and improving on previous models.
  • This technique has shown successful results with different cancer cell lines, leading to detectable tumors shortly after injection, and offers advantages such as preservation of liver function and reproducibility for biological studies and testing.

Article Abstract

Liver metastases are the most frequent cause of death due to colorectal cancer (CRC). Syngeneic orthotopic animal models, based on the grafting of cancer cells or tissue in host liver, are efficient systems for studying liver tumors and their (patho)physiological environment. Here we describe selective portal vein injection as a novel tool to generate syngeneic orthotopic models of liver tumors that avoid most of the weaknesses of existing syngeneic models. By combining portal vein injection of cancer cells with the selective clamping of distal liver lobes, tumor growth is limited to specific lobes. When applied on MC-38 CRC cells and their mouse host C57BL6, selective portal vein injection leads with 100% penetrance to MRI-detectable tumors within 1 wk, followed by a steady growth until the time of death (survival ∼7 wk) in the absence of extrahepatic disease. Similar results were obtained using CT-26 cells and their syngeneic Balb/c hosts. As a proof of principle, lobe-restricted liver tumors were also generated using Hepa1-6 (C57BL6-syngeneic) and TIB-75 (Balb/c-syngeneic) hepatocellular cancer cells, demonstrating the general applicability of selective portal vein injection for the induction of malignant liver tumors. Selective portal vein injection is technically straightforward, enables liver invasion via anatomical routes, preserves liver function, and provides unaffected liver tissue. The tumor models are reproducible and highly penetrant, with survival mainly dependent on the growth of lobe-restricted liver malignancy. These models enable biological studies and preclinical testing within short periods of time.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.00209.2015DOI Listing

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