» Articles » PMID: 33571801

The Impact of Initial Tumor Microenvironment on Imaging Phenotype

Abstract

Models of human cancer, to be useful, must replicate human disease with high fidelity. Our focus in this study is rat xenograft brain tumors as a model of human embedded cerebral tumors. A distinguishing signature of such tumors in humans, that of contrast-enhancement on imaging, is often not present when the human cells grow in rodents, despite the xenografts having nearly identical DNA signatures to the original tumor specimen. Although contrast enhancement was uniformly evident in all the human tumors from which the xenografts' cells were derived, we show that long-term contrast enhancement in the model tumors may be determined conditionally by the tumor microenvironment at the time of cell implantation. We demonstrate this phenomenon in one of two patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (PDOX) models using cancer stem-like cell (CSC)-enriched neurospheres from human tumor resection specimens, transplanted to groups of immune-compromised rats in the presence or absence of a collagen/fibrin scaffolding matrix, Matrigel. The rats were imaged by dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) and their brains were examined by histopathology. Targeted proteomics of the PDOX tumor specimens grown from CSC implanted with and without Matrigel showed that while the levels of the majority of proteins and post-translational modifications were comparable between contrast-enhancing and non-enhancing tumors, phosphorylation of Fox038 showed a differential expression. The results suggest key proteins determine contrast enhancement and suggest a path toward the development of better animal models of human glioma. Future work is needed to elucidate fully the molecular determinants of contrast-enhancement.

Citing Articles

Characterization of the Response of 9L and U-251N Orthotopic Brain Tumors to 3D Conformal Radiation Therapy.

Valadie O, Brown S, Farmer K, Nagaraja T, Cabral G, Shadaia S Radiat Res. 2023; 199(3):217-228.

PMID: 36656561 PMC: 10174721. DOI: 10.1667/RADE-22-00048.1.


Adaptation of laser interstitial thermal therapy for tumor ablation under MRI monitoring in a rat orthotopic model of glioblastoma.

Nagaraja T, Bartlett S, Farmer K, Cabral G, Knight R, Valadie O Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2021; 163(12):3455-3463.

PMID: 34554269 PMC: 8893160. DOI: 10.1007/s00701-021-05002-y.

References
1.
Elmghirbi R, Nagaraja T, Brown S, Keenan K, Panda S, Cabral G . Toward a noninvasive estimate of interstitial fluid pressure by dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI in a rat model of cerebral tumor. Magn Reson Med. 2018; 80(5):2040-2052. PMC: 6107371. DOI: 10.1002/mrm.27163. View

2.
Izumchenko E, Paz K, Ciznadija D, Sloma I, Katz A, Vasquez-Dunddel D . Patient-derived xenografts effectively capture responses to oncology therapy in a heterogeneous cohort of patients with solid tumors. Ann Oncol. 2017; 28(10):2595-2605. PMC: 5834154. DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdx416. View

3.
Renault V, Rafalski V, Morgan A, Salih D, Brett J, Webb A . FoxO3 regulates neural stem cell homeostasis. Cell Stem Cell. 2009; 5(5):527-39. PMC: 2775802. DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2009.09.014. View

4.
Aldape K, Brindle K, Chesler L, Chopra R, Gajjar A, Gilbert M . Challenges to curing primary brain tumours. Nat Rev Clin Oncol. 2019; 16(8):509-520. PMC: 6650350. DOI: 10.1038/s41571-019-0177-5. View

5.
Calabrese C, Poppleton H, Kocak M, Hogg T, Fuller C, Hamner B . A perivascular niche for brain tumor stem cells. Cancer Cell. 2007; 11(1):69-82. DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2006.11.020. View