Sieren Jessica C, Meyerholz David K, Wang Xiao-Jun, Davis Bryan T, Newell John D, Hammond Emily, Rohret Judy A, Rohret Frank A, Struzynski Jason T, Goeken J Adam, Naumann Paul W, Leidinger Mariah R, Taghiyev Agshin, Van Rheeden Richard, Hagen Jussara, Darbro Benjamin W, Quelle Dawn E, Rogers Christopher S
J Clin Invest. 2014 Sep;124(9):4052-66. doi: 10.1172/JCI75447. Epub 2014 Aug 8.
Cancer is the second deadliest disease in the United States, necessitating improvements in tumor diagnosis and treatment. Current model systems of cancer are informative, but translating promising imaging approaches and therapies to clinical practice has been challenging. In particular, the lack of a large-animal model that accurately mimics human cancer has been a major barrier to the development of effective diagnostic tools along with surgical and therapeutic interventions. Here, we developed a genetically modified porcine model of cancer in which animals express a mutation in TP53 (which encodes p53) that is orthologous to one commonly found in humans (R175H in people, R167H in pigs). TP53(R167H/R167H) mutant pigs primarily developed lymphomas and osteogenic tumors, recapitulating the tumor types observed in mice and humans expressing orthologous TP53 mutant alleles. CT and MRI imaging data effectively detected developing tumors, which were validated by histopathological evaluation after necropsy. Molecular genetic analyses confirmed that these animals expressed the R167H mutant p53, and evaluation of tumors revealed characteristic chromosomal instability. Together, these results demonstrated that TP53(R167H/R167H) pigs represent a large-animal tumor model that replicates the human condition. Our data further suggest that this model will be uniquely suited for developing clinically relevant, noninvasive imaging approaches to facilitate earlier detection, diagnosis, and treatment of human cancers.
癌症是美国第二大致命疾病,因此需要改进肿瘤的诊断和治疗方法。当前的癌症模型系统提供了很多信息,但将有前景的成像方法和治疗手段转化为临床实践一直具有挑战性。特别是,缺乏能够准确模拟人类癌症的大型动物模型,这一直是有效诊断工具以及手术和治疗干预发展的主要障碍。在此,我们开发了一种基因改造的猪癌症模型,其中动物表达与人类常见突变(人类中的R175H,猪中的R167H)直系同源的TP53(编码p53)突变。TP53(R167H/R167H)突变猪主要发生淋巴瘤和成骨性肿瘤,重现了在表达直系同源TP53突变等位基因的小鼠和人类中观察到的肿瘤类型。CT和MRI成像数据有效地检测到了正在发展的肿瘤,尸检后的组织病理学评估证实了这一点。分子遗传学分析证实这些动物表达R167H突变型p53,对肿瘤的评估揭示了特征性的染色体不稳定性。总之,这些结果表明TP53(R167H/R167H)猪代表了一种能复制人类病情的大型动物肿瘤模型。我们的数据进一步表明,该模型将特别适合于开发临床相关的非侵入性成像方法,以促进人类癌症的早期检测、诊断和治疗。