Schachtschneider Kyle M, Schwind Regina M, Newson Jordan, Kinachtchouk Nickolas, Rizko Mark, Mendoza-Elias Nasya, Grippo Paul, Principe Daniel R, Park Alex, Overgaard Nana H, Jungersen Gregers, Garcia Kelly D, Maker Ajay V, Rund Laurie A, Ozer Howard, Gaba Ron C, Schook Lawrence B
Department of Radiology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Albion College, Albion, MI, United States.
Front Oncol. 2017 Aug 23;7:190. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2017.00190. eCollection 2017.
Despite an improved understanding of cancer molecular biology, immune landscapes, and advancements in cytotoxic, biologic, and immunologic anti-cancer therapeutics, cancer remains a leading cause of death worldwide. More than 8.2 million deaths were attributed to cancer in 2012, and it is anticipated that cancer incidence will continue to rise, with 19.3 million cases expected by 2025. The development and investigation of new diagnostic modalities and innovative therapeutic tools is critical for reducing the global cancer burden. Toward this end, transitional animal models serve a crucial role in bridging the gap between fundamental diagnostic and therapeutic discoveries and human clinical trials. Such animal models offer insights into all aspects of the basic science-clinical translational cancer research continuum (screening, detection, oncogenesis, tumor biology, immunogenicity, therapeutics, and outcomes). To date, however, cancer research progress has been markedly hampered by lack of a genotypically, anatomically, and physiologically relevant large animal model. Without progressive cancer models, discoveries are hindered and cures are improbable. Herein, we describe a transgenic porcine model-the Oncopig Cancer Model (OCM)-as a next-generation large animal platform for the study of hematologic and solid tumor oncology. With mutations in key tumor suppressor and oncogenes, and , the OCM recapitulates transcriptional hallmarks of human disease while also exhibiting clinically relevant histologic and genotypic tumor phenotypes. Moreover, as obesity rates increase across the global population, cancer patients commonly present clinically with multiple comorbid conditions. Due to the effects of these comorbidities on patient management, therapeutic strategies, and clinical outcomes, an ideal animal model should develop cancer on the background of representative comorbid conditions (tumor macro- and microenvironments). As observed in clinical practice, liver cirrhosis frequently precedes development of primary liver cancer or hepatocellular carcinoma. The OCM has the capacity to develop tumors in combination with such relevant comorbidities. Furthermore, studies on the tumor microenvironment demonstrate similarities between OCM and human cancer genomic landscapes. This review highlights the potential of this and other large animal platforms as transitional models to bridge the gap between basic research and clinical practice.
尽管对癌症分子生物学、免疫格局的理解有所改善,并且细胞毒性、生物和免疫抗癌疗法也取得了进展,但癌症仍然是全球主要的死亡原因。2012年,超过820万人死于癌症,预计癌症发病率将持续上升,到2025年预计将有1930万例。开发和研究新的诊断方法和创新治疗工具对于减轻全球癌症负担至关重要。为此,过渡性动物模型在弥合基础诊断和治疗发现与人类临床试验之间的差距方面发挥着关键作用。此类动物模型为基础科学-临床转化癌症研究连续体(筛查、检测、肿瘤发生、肿瘤生物学、免疫原性、治疗和结果)的各个方面提供了见解。然而,迄今为止,癌症研究进展明显受到缺乏基因、解剖和生理相关的大型动物模型的阻碍。没有渐进性癌症模型,发现就会受阻,治愈也不太可能。在此,我们描述一种转基因猪模型——肿瘤猪癌症模型(OCM)——作为研究血液学和实体肿瘤肿瘤学的下一代大型动物平台。通过关键肿瘤抑制基因和癌基因的突变,OCM概括了人类疾病的转录特征,同时还表现出临床相关的组织学和基因型肿瘤表型。此外,随着全球肥胖率上升,癌症患者临床上通常伴有多种合并症。由于这些合并症对患者管理、治疗策略和临床结果的影响,理想的动物模型应该在具有代表性的合并症(肿瘤宏观和微观环境)背景下发生癌症。正如临床实践中所观察到的,肝硬化常常先于原发性肝癌或肝细胞癌的发生。OCM有能力在伴有此类相关合并症的情况下发生肿瘤。此外,对肿瘤微环境的研究表明OCM与人类癌症基因组格局之间存在相似性。本综述强调了这种及其他大型动物平台作为过渡模型在弥合基础研究与临床实践之间差距方面的潜力。