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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have previously reported the development of a transgenic mouse model for prostate cancer derived from PB-Tag transgenic line 8247, henceforth designated the
TRAMP
(transgenic adenocarcinoma mouse prostate) model. We now describe the temporal and spatial consequences of transgene expression and report the identification and characterization of
metastatic disease
in the
TRAMP
model.
TRAMP
mice characteristically express the T antigen oncoprotein by 8 weeks of age and develop distinct pathology in the epithelium of the dorsolateral prostate by 10 weeks of age. Distant site
metastases
can be detected as early as 12 weeks of age. The common sites of
metastases
are the periaortic lymph nodes and lungs, with occasional
metastases
to the kidney, adrenal gland, and bone. By 28 weeks of age, 100% harbor metastatic prostate cancer in the lymph nodes or lungs. We have also demonstrated the loss of normal E-cadherin expression, as observed in human prostate cancer, as primary tumors become less differentiated and
metastasize
. The
TRAMP
model provides a consistent source of primary and metastatic tumors for histopathobiological and molecular analysis to further define the earliest molecular events involved in the genesis, progression, and metastasis of prostate cancer.
...
PMID:Metastatic prostate cancer in a transgenic mouse. 879 72
Cancer relapse after surgery is a common occurrence, most frequently resulting from the outgrowth of minimal residual disease in the form of
metastases
. We examined the effectiveness of cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) blockade as an adjunctive immunotherapy to reduce metastatic relapse after primary prostate tumor resection. For these studies, we developed a murine model in which overt metastatic outgrowth of
TRAMP
-C2 (C2) prostate cancer ensues after complete primary tumor resection. Metastatic relapse in this model occurs reliably and principally within the draining lymph nodes in close proximity to the primary tumor, arising from established
metastases
present at the time of surgery. Using this model, we demonstrate that adjunctive CTLA-4 blockade administered immediately after primary tumor resection reduces metastatic relapse from 97.4 to 44%. Consistent with this, lymph nodes obtained 2 weeks after treatment reveal marked destruction or complete elimination of C2
metastases
in 60% of mice receiving adjunctive anti-CTLA-4 whereas 100% of control antibody-treated mice demonstrate progressive C2 lymph node replacement. Our study demonstrates the potential of adjunctive CTLA-4 blockade immunotherapy to reduce cancer relapse emanating from minimal residual
metastatic disease
and may have broader implications for improving the capability of immunotherapy by combining such forms of therapy with other cytoreductive measures including surgery.
...
PMID:Elimination of residual metastatic prostate cancer after surgery and adjunctive cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) blockade immunotherapy. 1061 40
The impact of bcl-2 proto-oncogene expression on the pathogenesis and progression of prostate cancer was examined in a transgenic mouse model. Probasin-bcl-2 transgenic mice were crossed with
TRAMP
(TRansgenic Adenocarcinoma Mouse Prostate) mice that express the SV40 early genes (T/t antigens) under probasin control. Prostate size, cell proliferation, apoptosis, and the incidence and latency of tumor formation were evaluated. The double transgenic, probasin-bcl-2 X
TRAMP
F1 (BxT) mice exhibited an increase in the wet weight of the prostate. This was associated with an increase in proliferation, attributable to T/t antigens, and a decrease in apoptosis attributable to bcl-2. The latency to tumor formation was also decreased in the BxT mice compared to the
TRAMP
mice. The incidence of
metastases
was identical in both the
TRAMP
and BxT mice. Lastly, the incidence of hormone-independent prostate cancer was reduced in the BxT mice compared to the
TRAMP
mice. Together, these results demonstrate that bcl-2 can facilitate multistep prostate carcinogenesis in vivo.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 accelerates multistep prostate carcinogenesis in vivo. 1107 42
In patients with localized prostate cancer, radical prostatectomy and radiation therapy, although effective in controlling localized disease, are often associated with significant side effects attributable to injury of adjacent tissues. Moreover, patients with
metastatic disease
eventually fail systemic hormonal or chemotherapy because of the development of progressive, refractory disease. In this study, we evaluated the safety and efficacy of a novel suicide gene therapy that could potentially spare normal tissue while bypassing molecular mechanisms of apoptosis resistance by using chemically inducible effector caspases to trigger apoptosis in prostate cancer cells. Initially, we compared the ability of a panel of inducible Fas signaling intermediates to kill human and murine prostate cancer cell lines. On the basis of the superior killing by downstream caspase-1 and caspase-3, replication-deficient adenoviral vectors expressing conditional caspase-1 (Ad-G/iCasp1) or caspase-3 (Ad-G/iCasp3), regulated by nontoxic, lipid-permeable, chemical inducers of dimerization (CID), were constructed. Upon vector transduction followed by CID administration, aggregation and activation of these recombinant caspases occur, leading to rapid apoptosis. In vitro, both human (LNCaP and PC-3) and murine (
TRAMP
-C2 and
TRAMP
-C2G) prostate cancer cell lines were efficiently transduced and killed in a CID-dependent fashion. In vivo, direct injection of Ad-G/iCasp1 into s.c.
TRAMP
-C2 tumors caused focal but extensive apoptosis without evidence for a bystander effect at the maximal viral dose (i.e., 2.5 x 10(10) viral particles/25 microl) in host animals that also received CID compared with control animals. Treatment with Ad-G/iCasp1 plus CID resulted in a transient, yet significant, reduction both in tumor growth and volume compared with tumors treated with vector but not CID (P < 0.035) or vector-diluent plus CID (P < 0.022), both of which grew more rapidly. These results demonstrate that CID-regulated, caspase-based suicide gene therapy is safe and can inhibit the growth of experimental prostate cancer in vitro and in vivo through potent induction of apoptosis, providing a rationale for further development.
...
PMID:Adenovirus-mediated transfer of inducible caspases: a novel "death switch" gene therapeutic approach to prostate cancer. 1128 32
A variety of novel therapeutic approaches have emerged recently for the treatment of human cancers. We have coupled two of these therapeutic approaches, gene therapy and antiangiogenic therapy and tested them in two murine prostate cancer models Recombinant adenovirus encoding the ligand-binding ectodomain of the VEGF receptor 2 (Flk1) fused to an Fc domain was administered to SCID mice carrying orthotopic human LNCaP tumors as well as to transgenic (
TRAMP
) mice with spontaneous prostate tumors. Ad Flk1-Fc injection reduced tumor growth by 66% for orthotopic LNCaP tumors and by 42% for spontaneous tumors in
TRAMP
mice. Microvessel density in the primary tumors was reduced by 68% and 40% in the two models respectively. A decrease in microvessel density was also observed in lymphatic
metastases
in Ad Flk1-Fc-treated
TRAMP
mice and was correlated with a decrease in the frequency of regional
metastases
in the treated animals. Survival time was also extended in the Ad Flk1-Fc-treated
TRAMP
mice relative to the control-treated animals. Our results suggest that adenoviral delivery of soluble Flk1 receptor can reduce vascular density and prostate tumor growth and prolong survival time in orthotopically implanted tumors as well as in spontaneous prostate tumors in transgenic animals.
...
PMID:Gene therapy of prostate cancer with the soluble vascular endothelial growth factor receptor Flk1. 1249 88
The main focus of the Symposium was the fact that cell types of the innate and adaptive immune systems can have tumor-favoring as well as tumor antagonistic effects, both in a preventive and therapeutic mode. It was shown that macrophages (Mphi) and dendritic cells within a tumor exert tumor-favoring effects through the action of certain cytokines. Inflammatory reactions could favor the onset and growth of tumors. Dual immune functions were shown with CD4+ T cells and certain matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activities favoring tumor progression and CD8+ T cells and certain heat shock proteins having antitumor action. Lack of antitumor action despite positive immune stimulation was also shown to depend on the existence of barriers to tumor infiltration by lymphocytes; remodeling of vasculature, e.g., by IFNgamma-induced cytokines like MIG and IPIO, reversed this type of impediment. Certain CXC cytokines increased tumor progression, whereas others, particularly those induced by IFNgamma, had the opposite effect; stromal-derived factor-1 and its receptor CXCR4 affected tumor propensity to
metastasize
in certain organs. Stromal-derived factor-1 induced MMP9, which in turn regulated the bioavailability of vascular endothelial growth factor and the cascade of its tumor-favoring effects, whereas granulocyte colony-stimulating factor decreased MMP9 and the consequences of its action. The effects of certain proinflammatory cytokines and vascular endothelial growth factor functions in angiogenesis and lymphoangiogenesis were also discussed. The favoring effects of fever-like thermal stress on the function of molecules instrumental in lymphoid cell adhesion to vessels and infiltration into sites of immune actions were described. The mechanisms involved in the development of immune memory and those conditioning Type I and CTL responses were also discussed. A number of presentations were concerned with laboratory studies aimed at developing clinical regimens with potential activity in the prevention or treatment of cancer. Prevention of Her2/neu breast cancer in transgenic mice was achieved by suitable regimens with IL12 combined with vaccines, including DNA-based vaccines administered in conjunction with electroporation. Vaccination with shared tumor antigen MUCI or cyclin B was discussed, and its clinical translation was described. The prevention of
TRAMP
prostate tumor in transgenic mice by anti-CTLA4 antibody plus vaccine was described, as was the translation of these regimens to the clinics. Clinical successes in melanoma patients using antimelanoma antigen antibodies in a therapeutic mode and precautions to be exerted in evaluating in vivo immune responses based on in vitro assays were emphasized. The symposium was concluded with an overall discussion focused on basic questions related to the capability of immunity to exert tumor-favoring or antitumor effects depending on conditions determined by both tumor and host functions.
...
PMID:Fourteenth Annual Pezcoller Symposium: the novel dichotomy of immune interactions with tumors. 1278 11
We established an orthotopic treatment model of prostate cancer to generate reproducible primary and metastatic carcinoma in immunocompetent C57BL/6 mice. Using an in vivo selection scheme of intraprostatic implantation of
TRAMP
-C1 cells, primary prostate tumors were cultured and recycled three times by intraprostatic injection resulting in the selection and establishment of the recycled cell line
TRAMP
-C1P3. Prostate tumors were detected approximately 30 days post-implantation with periaortic lymph node metastasis in 19/20 (95%) of mice. Tissue culture amplification, DNA ploidy and PCR amplification of the SV40 transgene were used to detect metastatic
TRAMP
-C1P3 in lymph node specimens. Tissue culture amplification and DNA ploidy were as sensitive as SV40 transgene amplification by PCR in detection of early
metastatic disease
in draining lymph nodes. To establish the use of the orthotopic model of prostate cancer for immunotherapy, mice were injected orthotopically with
TRAMP
-C1P3 cells and 7 days post-implantation treated daily for 28 days with either flt3L or carrier control. Carrier-treated mice had clinically detectable prostate tumors, lymph node metastasis and were moribund at 29-35 days, whereas flt3L therapy markedly suppressed primary
TRAMP
-C1P3 growth and lymph node metastasis, and prolonged survival. In summary, we have established a reproducible and clinically relevant orthotopic treatment model of prostate cancer in immunocompetent mice with application to a variety of therapeutic strategies. We demonstrate that flt3L treatment suppressed orthotopic prostate tumor growth and lymph node metastasis reinforcing a role for flt3L as an immunotherapeutic strategy for prostate cancer.
...
PMID:Orthotopic treatment model of prostate cancer and metastasis in the immunocompetent mouse: efficacy of flt3 ligand immunotherapy. 1456 27
A novel orthotopic metastatic model of mouse prostate cancer was developed using MHC-negative
TRAMP
-C1P3 (transgenic adenocarcinoma of mouse prostate) cells derived by serial passage of the parental
TRAMP
-C1 line in mouse prostate glands.
TRAMP
-C1P3 cells grew efficiently in mouse prostate glands and reproducibly metastasized to draining lymph nodes. Using this model, we show that Fms-like tyrosine kinase-3 ligand (flt3-L) dramatically inhibited growth of preexisting orthotopic
TRAMP
-C1P3 tumors and the development of
metastatic disease
. Mice remained in remission for several months following termination of flt3-L treatment but eventually relapsed and died of progressive disease. flt3-ligand treatment induced a pronounced mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate that consisted of CD8alpha-CD4- dendritic cells (CD11c+), macrophages, granulocytes (Gr-1+) and to a lesser extent T cells (CD4+ and CD8+). Dendritic cells isolated from
TRAMP
-C1P3 tumors were phenotypically immature (CD11c+ B7.2-I-A-CD40-), and this phenotype was also predominant in peripheral organs of mice treated with flt3-L alone or in combination with the DC maturation factor, CD40-L. Diminished expression of TCR-beta, CD3-epsilon, and CD3-zeta was also observed on intratumoral T cells, although these signaling proteins were reexpressed following in vitro culture with IL-2. The TCR/CD3 complex remained intact on peripheral T cells except in mice treated with flt3-L where CD3-zeta loss was observed. In contrast to alphabeta-T cells, tumor-infiltrating gammadelta-T cells maintained expression of their antigen receptors but not CD3epsilon. Thus,
TRAMP
-C1P3 tumors quickly establish a microenvironment that profoundly diminishes expression of molecules critical for normal dendritic cell and T cell function, thus limiting the efficacy of flt3-L and CD40-L immunotherapy. Overall, these data suggest that long-term cures of established MHC-negative tumors may not be achieved until therapeutic interventions are engineered to overcome this immunosuppressive microenvironment.
...
PMID:Prostate tumor microenvironment alters immune cells and prevents long-term survival in an orthotopic mouse model following flt3-ligand/CD40-ligand immunotherapy. 1467 30
Hyperforin (Hyp), the major lipophilic constituent of St. John's wort, was assayed as a stable dicyclohexylammonium salt (Hyp-DCHA) for cytotoxicity and inhibition of matrix proteinases, tumor invasion, and metastasis. Hyp-DCHA triggered apoptosis-associated cytotoxic effect in both murine (C-26, B16-LU8, and
TRAMP
-C1) and human (HT-1080 and SK-N-BE) tumor cells; its effect varied, with B16-LU8, HT-1080, and C-26 the most sensitive (IC50 = 5 to 8 micromol/L). At these concentrations, a marked and progressive decline of growth was observed in HT-1080 cells, whereas untransformed endothelial cells were only marginally affected. Hyp-DCHA inhibited in a dose-dependent and noncompetitive manner various proteinases instrumental to extracellular matrix degradation; the activity of leukocyte elastase was inhibited the most (IC50 = 3 micromol/L), followed by cathepsin G and urokinase-type plasminogen activator, whereas that of the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) 2 and 9 showed an IC50 > 100 micromol/L. Nevertheless, inhibition of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 constitutive activity and reduction of MMP-2 and MMP-9 secretion was triggered by 0.5 micromol/L Hyp-DCHA to various degrees in different cell lines, the most in C-26. Inhibition of C-26 and HT-1080 cell chemoinvasion (80 and 54%, respectively) through reconstituted basement membrane was observed at these doses. Finally, in mice that received i.v. injections of C-26 or B16-LU8 cells, daily i.p. administration of Hyp-DCHA-without reaching tumor-cytotoxic blood levels-remarkably reduced inflammatory infiltration, neovascularization, lung weight (-48%), and size of experimental
metastases
with C-26 (-38%) and number of lung metastases with B16-LU8 (-22%), with preservation of apparently healthy and active behavior. These observations qualify Hyp-DCHA as an interesting lead compound to prevent and contrast cancer spread and metastatic growth.
...
PMID:Hyperforin inhibits cancer invasion and metastasis. 1534 8
Caveolin-1 (Cav-1) is the primary structural component of caveolae and is implicated in the processes of vesicular transport, cholesterol balance, transformation, and tumorigenesis. Despite an abundance of data suggesting that Cav-1 has transformation suppressor properties both in vitro and in vivo, Cav-1 is expressed at increased levels in human prostate cancer. To investigate the role of Cav-1 in prostate cancer onset and progression, we interbred Cav-1(-/-) null mice with a
TRAMP
(transgenic adenocarcinoma of mouse prostate) model that spontaneously develops advanced prostate cancer and
metastatic disease
. We found that, although the loss of Cav-1 did not affect the appearance of minimally invasive prostate cancer, its absence significantly impeded progression to highly invasive and
metastatic disease
. Inactivation of one (+/-) or both (-/-) alleles of Cav-1 resulted in significant reductions in prostate tumor burden, as well as decreases in regional lymph node
metastases
. Moreover, further examination revealed decreased metastasis to distant organs, such as the lungs, in
TRAMP
/Cav-1(-/-) mice. Utilizing prostate carcinoma cell lines (C1, C2, and C3) derived from
TRAMP
tumors, we also showed a positive correlation between Cav-1 expression and the ability of these cells to form tumors in vivo. Furthermore, down-regulation of Cav-1 expression in these cells, using a small interfering RNA approach, significantly reduced their tumorigenic and metastatic potential. Mechanistically, we showed that loss or down-regulation of Cav-1 expression results in increased apoptosis, with increased prostate apoptosis response factor-4 and PTEN levels in Cav-1(-/-) null prostate tumors. Our current findings provide the first in vivo molecular genetic evidence that Cav-1 does indeed function as a tumor promoter during prostate carcinogenesis, rather than as a tumor suppressor.
...
PMID:Caveolin-1 promotes tumor progression in an autochthonous mouse model of prostate cancer: genetic ablation of Cav-1 delays advanced prostate tumor development in tramp mice. 1580 73
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