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Orthotopic tumorgrafts in nude mice as a model to evaluate calcitriol effects in breast cancer

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Author(s):
Fonseca-Filho, V. C. N. ; Katayama, M. L. H. ; Lyra, E. C. ; Maria, D. A. ; Basso, R. A. ; Nonogaki, S. ; Guerra, J. M. ; Maistro, S. ; Goes, J. C. G. S. ; Folgueira, M. A. A. K.
Total Authors: 10
Document type: Journal article
Source: Brazilian Journal of Biology; v. 77, n. 4, p. 12-pg., 2017-11-01.
Abstract

Calcitriol antiproliferative effects were observed in xenografts of breast cancer cell lines, however they were not yet investigated in tumorgrafts, consisting of freshly collected breast cancer samples xenografted into animals. Objectives: To establish a tumorgraft model, from freshly collected breast cancer samples, which were directly implanted in nude mice, to study calcitriol effects. Methods: Breast cancer samples collected from 12 patients were orthotopically implanted into nude mice. Animals were treated with weekly intratumoral injections of calcitriol 3 mu g/Kg, which was previously shown to induce peak serum calcitriol levels in the predicted therapeutic range. Results: Success engraftment rate was 25%. Tumorgrafts were established from aggressive (HER2 positive or histological grade 3) highly proliferative samples and original tumor characteristics were preserved. Calcitriol highly induced its target gene, CYP24A1, indicating that the genomic vitamin D pathway is active in tumorgrafts. However, no differences in the expression of proliferation and apoptosis markers (BrdU incorporation, Ki67, CDKN1A, CDKN1B, BCL2 expression) were observed in these highly proliferative tumor samples. Conclusions: Tumorgrafts seem a promising model to explore other calcitriol doses and regimens, considering the heterogeneity of the disease and microenvironment interactions. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 11/09103-1 - Proliferation and expression of target genes in breast cancer xenografts from post menopausal patients exposed to intratumoral calcitriol
Grantee:Maria Aparecida Azevedo Koike Folgueira
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants