Wang Wendan, Gordon Jody L, Philbrick Kenneth A, Yang Xujuan, Branscum Adam J, Löhr Christiane V, Haschek Wanda M, Turner Russell T, Iwaniec Urszula T, Helferich William G
Food Science and Human Nutrition, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois, United States of America.
Skeletal Biology Laboratory, College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jul 27;12(7):e0180886. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180886. eCollection 2017.
Breast cancer metastasizes to bone in the majority of patients with advanced disease. We investigated the effects of inadequate dietary calcium (Ca) on bone turnover, tumor growth, and bone response to tumor in tibia inoculated with 4T1 mammary carcinoma cells. Nine-month-old female Balb/c mice were placed on an adequate Ca (5 g/kg diet, n = 30) or low Ca (80 mg/kg diet, n = 31) diet for 14 days, then injected intratibially with 1,000 4T1 cells (transfected with luciferase for bioluminescence imaging), and sacrificed at 5, 10, or 21 days post-inoculation (n = 7-10 mice/group). Control mice (n = 6/group) were injected with carrier and sacrificed at 10 days post-inoculation. Tibiae with muscle intact were excised and evaluated by microcomputed tomography and histology. In vivo bioluminescent imaging revealed that 4T1 cells metastasized to lung. Therefore, lungs were removed for quantification of tumor. Mice fed low Ca exhibited higher bone turnover and higher tibial lesion scores than mice fed adequate Ca. Lesion severity, manifested as cortical osteolysis and periosteal woven bone formation, and tumor cell infiltration to muscle, increased with time, irrespective of diet. However, for most skeletal endpoints the rates of increase were greater in mice consuming low Ca compared to mice consuming adequate Ca. Infiltration of tumor cells into adjacent muscle, but not metastasis to lung, was also greater in mice consuming low Ca diet. The findings suggest that high bone turnover due to Ca insufficiency results in greater local mammary tumor cell growth, cortical osteolysis, woven bone formation, and invasion to muscle in mice.
在大多数晚期乳腺癌患者中,癌症会转移至骨骼。我们研究了饮食中钙(Ca)摄入不足对骨转换、肿瘤生长以及接种4T1乳腺癌细胞的胫骨中骨对肿瘤反应的影响。将9月龄雌性Balb/c小鼠分为两组,分别给予充足钙(5 g/kg饮食,n = 30)或低钙(80 mg/kg饮食,n = 31)饮食14天,然后经胫骨内注射1000个4T1细胞(转染了荧光素酶用于生物发光成像),并在接种后5、10或21天处死(每组n = 7 - 10只小鼠)。对照组小鼠(每组n = 6只)注射载体,并在接种后10天处死。完整保留肌肉的胫骨被切除,并通过微型计算机断层扫描和组织学进行评估。体内生物发光成像显示4T1细胞转移至肺部。因此,将肺取出用于肿瘤定量分析。与摄入充足钙的小鼠相比,摄入低钙的小鼠表现出更高的骨转换和更高的胫骨病变评分。病变严重程度,表现为皮质骨溶解和骨膜编织骨形成,以及肿瘤细胞向肌肉的浸润,随时间增加,与饮食无关。然而,对于大多数骨骼终点指标,与摄入充足钙的小鼠相比,摄入低钙的小鼠增加速率更大。摄入低钙饮食的小鼠中,肿瘤细胞向相邻肌肉的浸润,但不是向肺的转移,也更多。这些发现表明,钙缺乏导致的高骨转换会使小鼠局部乳腺肿瘤细胞生长、皮质骨溶解、编织骨形成以及向肌肉的侵袭增加。