Department of General, Visceral, Vascular and Transplantation Surgery, University Medical Center Rostock, University of Rostock, Rostock 18057, Germany.
Department of Thoracic Surgery, University Medical Center Rostock, University of Rostock, Rostock 18057, Germany.
World J Gastroenterol. 2020 Apr 7;26(13):1394-1426. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v26.i13.1394.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common diagnosed malignancy among both sexes in the United States as well as in the European Union. While the incidence and mortality rates in western, high developed countries are declining, reflecting the success of screening programs and improved treatment regimen, a rise of the overall global CRC burden can be observed due to lifestyle changes paralleling an increasing human development index. Despite a growing insight into the biology of CRC and many therapeutic improvements in the recent decades, preclinical models are still indispensable for the development of new treatment approaches. Since the development of carcinogen-induced rodent models for CRC more than 80 years ago, a plethora of animal models has been established to study colon cancer biology. Despite tenuous invasiveness and metastatic behavior, these models are useful for chemoprevention studies and to evaluate colitis-related carcinogenesis. Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMM) mirror the pathogenesis of sporadic as well as inherited CRC depending on the specific molecular pathways activated or inhibited. Although the vast majority of CRC GEMM lack invasiveness, metastasis and tumor heterogeneity, they still have proven useful for examination of the tumor microenvironment as well as systemic immune responses; thus, supporting development of new therapeutic avenues. Induction of metastatic disease by orthotopic injection of CRC cell lines is possible, but the so generated models lack genetic diversity and the number of suited cell lines is very limited. Patient-derived xenografts, in contrast, maintain the pathological and molecular characteristics of the individual patient's CRC after subcutaneous implantation into immunodeficient mice and are therefore most reliable for preclinical drug development - even in comparison to GEMM or cell line-based analyses. However, subcutaneous patient-derived xenograft models are less suitable for studying most aspects of the tumor microenvironment and anti-tumoral immune responses. The authors review the distinct mouse models of CRC with an emphasis on their clinical relevance and shed light on the latest developments in the field of preclinical CRC models.
结直肠癌(CRC)是美国和欧盟中男女最常见的第三大恶性肿瘤。虽然西方国家和高收入国家的发病率和死亡率正在下降,这反映了筛查计划的成功和治疗方案的改进,但由于与人类发展指数增加相关的生活方式改变,全球 CRC 负担总体呈上升趋势。尽管近年来对 CRC 生物学有了更多的了解,并且在治疗方面有了许多改进,但临床前模型对于开发新的治疗方法仍然是不可或缺的。自 80 多年前开发出用于 CRC 的致癌物诱导啮齿动物模型以来,已经建立了大量的动物模型来研究结肠癌生物学。尽管这些模型具有侵袭性和转移性行为,但它们仍然可用于化学预防研究和评估结肠炎相关的致癌作用。遗传工程小鼠模型(GEMM)根据激活或抑制的特定分子途径,反映散发性和遗传性 CRC 的发病机制。尽管绝大多数 CRC GEMM 缺乏侵袭性、转移性和肿瘤异质性,但它们仍然有助于检查肿瘤微环境和全身免疫反应,从而支持新治疗途径的发展。通过 CRC 细胞系的原位注射诱导转移疾病是可能的,但由此产生的模型缺乏遗传多样性,适合的细胞系数量非常有限。相比之下,患者来源的异种移植物在皮下植入免疫缺陷小鼠后保留了个体患者 CRC 的病理和分子特征,因此是最适合临床前药物开发的模型 - 即使与 GEMM 或基于细胞系的分析相比也是如此。然而,皮下患者来源的异种移植物模型不太适合研究肿瘤微环境和抗肿瘤免疫反应的大多数方面。作者综述了 CRC 的不同小鼠模型,重点介绍了它们的临床相关性,并阐明了临床前 CRC 模型领域的最新发展。