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 Mesothelioma treatments
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Research article
Characterization of human malignant mesothelioma cell lines orthotopically
implanted in the pleural cavity of immunodeficient mice for their ability
to grow and form metastasis
Daniele Martarelli1 , Alfonso Catalano2 , Antonio Procopio2 , Sara
Orecchia3 , Roberta Libener3 and Giorgio Santoni1
1Department of Experimental Medicine and Public Health, University of
Camerino, 62032 Camerino, Italy
2Department of Molecular Pathology and Innovative Therapies, Polytechnic
University of Marche, 60100, Ancona, Italy and Center of Cytology, Italian
National Research Centers on Aging (INRCA – IRCCS), Ancona, Italy
3Pathology Unit, Dept. Of Oncology, A.S.O. Alessandria, Italy
BMC Cancer 2006, 6:130 doi:10.1186/1471-2407-6-130
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be
found online at: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2407/6/130
Received 28 July 2005
Accepted 17 May 2006
Published 17 May 2006
© 2006 Martarelli et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Background
Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a tumor known to be resistant
to conventional therapies. Thus, an in vivo model can represent an important
tool for assessing the efficacy of novel approaches in the treatment of
MPM.
Presently, human MPM cells have been grown orthotopically in mice upon
transplantation of tumor masses or tumor cell suspensions following surgery.
In these models however, surgery can interfere with the tumor growth and
the early stages of tumor development cannot be easily explored. Finally,
results may not be so accurate due to implantation of potentially different
tumor samples in different experimental groups.
Our work aimed at establishing a nude mouse model xenotransplanted with
human MPM cell lines in which tumor progression exhibits some features
of the human disease.
Methods
Three distinct human MPM cell lines previously established from MPM patients
displaying two different phenotypes, biphasic (MM-B1 and IST-Mes3) and
epithelioid (IST-Mes2), were directly injected into the pleural cavity
of nude mice. At different times, mice were sacrificed for autopsy, tumor
nodules were counted and then removed for histology. Presence of metastases
in visceral organs was also monitored.
Results
IST-Mes2 cells were unable to grow in nude mice. MM-B1 and IST-Mes3 cells
were capable of growing in nude mice and formed tumor nodules in the pleura.
Post-mortem examination showed that MPM cells progressively colonized
the parietal and visceral pleura, the diaphragm, the mediastinum and,
lastly the lung parenchyma. No pneumo-thorax was evidenced in the mice.
Pleural effusions as well as lymph node metastases were observed only
at later times.
Conclusion
This model mimics the progression of human malignant mesothelioma and
it is easy to perform and reproducible; therefore it can be useful to
study human MPM biology and evaluate the efficacy of novel therapies.
Malignant pleural mesothelioma is a tumor of the pleura mainly caused
by exposure to asbestos fibers. MPM diagnosis regards about 2500 persons
every year in the United States [1] and the prognosis is poor despite
the therapies currently used, including surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
Because of the inefficacy of the conventional treatments, novel therapeutic
strategies are under investigation, with particular attention devoted
to agents capable of inhibiting the angiogenesis or inducing tumor cell
apoptosis [2-7].
Tumor angiogenesis, apoptosis and metastasis, strictly depend on the
site of tumor development; therefore a human-like animal model is an important
tool for studying new approaches for MPM treatment.
A number of evidences indicate that orthotopic models of tumor growth
are more valuable as compared to those in which the tumor mass grows subcutaneously
[8].
In regard to MPM, subcutaneous implantation of human cancer cells in
immunodeficient mice results in tumor growth at the injection site and
no metastatic dissemination, whereas human MPM growth in humans is associated
with regional tumor spreading and lung invasion [9].
Presently, human MPM cells have been grow orthotopically in mice upon
transplantation of tumor masses or tumor cell suspensions following surgery
[10]. In these models however, surgery can interfere with the tumor growth
[8] and the early stages of tumor development cannot be easily explored.
Finally, results may be not so accurate due to implantation of potentially
different tumor samples in different experimental groups [9]. Overall,
the aim of this work was to establish a new orthotopic tumor model by
injecting human MPM cells directly into the pleural cavity of nude mice.
This model does not need surgical operations, can be easily performed
and more importantly can mimic tumor development in humans. Thus it can
represent an useful tool for studying human MPM biology and assessing
the efficacy of novel therapies.
Outline Methods
Cell lines
Human malignant pleura mesothelial cell lines were established as previously
described [11,12]. Three distinct cell lines with two different phenotypes,
biphasic (MM-B1 and IST-Mes3) and epithelioid (IST-Mes2) were used between
the eighth and twelfth passage in culture. Cells were maintained in RPMI-1640
medium and 10% fetal bovine serum, 1% L-glutamine and 1% penicillin-streptomycin,
(Euroclone, Devon, UK) at 37°C in a humidified incubator in an atmosphere
of 5% CO2 in air.
Animals
Athymic male nude mice nu/nu (Harlan, Italy), 6 week-old were used. Mice
were kept in laminar-flow cages in standardized environmental conditions.
Sterilized food (Harlan, Italy) and water were supplied ad libitum.
Subcutaneous implantation of MPM cells in nude mice
Cells were harvested at near confluence with trypsin/EDTA solution. Only
cell suspensions with a viability of >90% as assessed by trypan blue
exclusion assay, were used. Two × 106 MPM cells in 100 µl
of Ca++ and Mg++ free Hank's balanced salt solution (HBSS) were injected
subcutaneously on the left lateral chest wall near to the axilla. Tumor
growth was monitored twice a week using a caliper. Tumor volume was calculated
using the formula: V (mm3) = (D × d2)/2, where d (mm) and D (mm)
are the smallest and largest perpendicular tumor diameter, respectively.
Orthotopic implantation of MPM cells in nude mice
Mice were anaesthetized with Tiletamine chlorohydrate and Zolazepam chlorohydrate
and placed in position of right lateral decubitus. A 27 gauge needle of
a 1000 µl syringe was advanced approximately through the fourth
intercostal space for about 5 mm, into the left pleural cavity, and two
× 106 tumor cells suspended in 100 µl of HBSS were injected.
The site of injection in the chest and the precise depth of the needle
tip required to reach the pleural space were previously determined by
injecting cresyl violet. A primary tumor cell line IST-Mes3/2P (IST-Mes3/2nd
Passage) was established from a IST-Mes3 tumor grown orthotopically. Tumors
were grounded into small pieces in RPMI-1640 and digested with trypsin/EDTA
solution. The cell suspension was then plated in a 75 ml culture flask
and the following day, non adherent cells were removed. Cells were maintained
in culture, and 2 × 106 cells were injected into the pleural cavity
of nude mice when devoid of fibroblasts or endothelial cells.
Therapeutic procedures
Four groups of animals were used. The first group of animals were used
to analyze the tumorigenicity of MPM cell lines after orthotopic or subcutaneous
implantation in nude mice. Animals were then injected with MPM cells as
reported in Table 1.
The second, third and fourth groups were used to analyze the growth rate
of IST-Mes3, IST-Mes3/2P and MM-B1 cells respectively after orthotopic
implantation in mice.
Autopsy and histology
Mice were sacrificed at different times following tumor cell injection
as specified.
Tumor nodules were counted, measured with the caliper, removed, immediately
snap frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80°C. The presence of
metastasis in the visceral organs was macroscopically checked.
Immunohistochemistry
Microvessel density (MVD) was determined by using the endothelial cell
marker CD31. Tumors were placed in OTC compound and snap frozen in liquid
nitrogen and stored at -80°C. Frozen section (10–20 µm) were
fixed with cold acetone (5 min), acetone/chlorophorm 1/1 (5 min) and cold
acetone (5 min). Samples were then rinsed with PBS/Triton 1%, and treated
with 3% hydrogen peroxide in methanol (vol/vol). Slides were incubated
in a blocking solution and then overnight at 4°C in a humidified chamber
with a rat anti-mouse CD31 monoclonal antibody (BD Biosciences Pharmingen,
NJ, USA). Thereafter, slides were rinsed with PBS and incubated, first
with the blocking solution for 20 min and then with a biotin-conjugated
goat anti-rat antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, CA, USA) for 1 h. Slides
were then rinsed with PBS and incubated for 30 min with the Vector Vectastain
ABC Kit (Vinci-Biochem, Vinci, FI). After 3 washes with PBS, positive
reactions were visualized by incubating the slides for 5 min with stable
DAB (Sigma, Italy). Slides were dried and mounted with Universal Mount.
For mesothelioma markers, 3–4 µm paraffin tumor sections were float
mounted on poly-L lysine coating slides, deparaffinized in xylene and
rehydrated in a descending ethanol series. Anti-Ber-EP4 monoclonal antibody
required enzymatic pre-treatment of the slides with 0.1% trypsin (Sigma,
St. Louis, MO) for 10 min at 37°C; for the other antibodies, slides
were not enzimatically pre-treated, but they were placed in 0.1 M citrate
buffer (pH 6.0) and boiled for 10 min in a microwave oven at 750 W to
enhance antigenicity. Slides were washed in phosphate buffer and incubated
for 10 min in 0.3% hydrogen peroxide to quench endogenous peroxidase activity.
Slides were then loaded onto a LabVision automated immunostainer (NeoMarkers,
Fremont, CA) and sequentially incubated with intervening washes in PBS
for 5 min, with 10% ovalbumin for 15 min to reduce non-specific background
staining, primary antibody for 60 min at room temperature, the appropriate
biotinylated linking antibody (NeoMarkers, Fremont, CA) for 10 min, peroxidase-labeled
streptavidin (NeoMarkers, Fremont, CA) for 10 min, and finally with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine
chromogen substrate for 10 min. Slides were then thoroughly rinsed in
distilled water and counterstained with Mayer's haematoxylin, dehydrated,
cleared in xylene and finally mounted in Entellan. Appropriate positive
and negative controls were included for each marker. A panel of eight
markers was used. Mouse anti-human antibodies included anti-CEA (dilution
1:100; NeoMarkers, Fremont, CA), polyclonal anti-calretinin (dilution
1:1000; NeoMarkers, Fremont, CA), monoclonal anti-CD15 (Leu-M1) (dilution
1:4; Becton Dickinson, NJ), monoclonal anti-Ber-EP4 (dilution 1:100; NeoMarkers,
Fremont, CA), monoclonal anti-cytokeratin 8 and 18 (dilution 1:50; Biomeda,
Foster City, CA), monoclonal anti-EMA (dilution 1:500; NeoMarkers, Fremont,
CA). monoclonal anti-mesothelioma (HBME-1) (dilution 1:25; NeoMarkers,
Fremont, CA), monoclonal anti-podoplanin (dilution 1:50; Serotec, Dusseldorf,
Germany).
Hematoxylin-and-eosin staining
Tumors were placed in OTC compound and snap frozen in liquid nitrogen
and stored at -80°C. Frozen section (10–20 µm) were fixed with
cold acetone (5 min), acetone/chlorophorm 1/1 (5 min), cold acetone (5
min). Slides were then rinsed with water for10 min, stained with Mayer's
Hematoxylin Solution for 10 min (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), rinsed with water
for 10 min and then stained with eosin 0.5% for 30 sec (Sigma, St. Louis,
MO). Slides were then dehydrated through 95% alcohol (5 min.) and 2 changes
of absolute alcohol, 5 min each, cleared in 2 changes of xylene (5 min)
and finally mounted with xylene based mounting medium.
Growth of human MPM cells in nude mice
Human MPM cell lines were tested for their ability to form tumors after
intrapleural and subcutaneous injection in nude mice. Table I summarizes
the tumor take rates of these cell lines. Tab. II, and III summarize the
growth rate of these cell lines after orthotopic implantation, whereas
Fig. 1. shows their growth rate following subcutaneous implantation. IST-Mes2
cells were unable to grow in nude mice. By contrast, 2 × 106 IST-Mes3
or MMB-1 tumor cells had a take-rate of 100 % when injected into the left
pleural cavity. The mean survival time was of 72.5 ± 6.4 days for
mice injected with MM-B1 cells; 81.5 ± 21.7 days for mice injected
with the IST-Mes3 cells and 69.6 ± 14.5 days for mice injected
with the IST-Mes3/2P cells. These mice were sacrificed when moribund,
or at different times after cell injection as specified in Tab. I, II,
III and IV. Animals injected with the IST-Mes3 cells were analyzed when
they became dyspneic because of the tumor growth rate varies from animal
to animal. These variations were not observed upon in vitro culture of
IST-Mes3 tumor as shown by the analysis of the growth rate of IST-Mes3/2P
cells. Tumor cells grew on both sides of parietal and visceral pleura,
diaphragm and mediastinum; at later times, tumor invasion into lung parenchyma
was observed (Fig. 2, 3). No pneumothorax was evidenced in the mice. Pleural
effusions as well as lymph node metastasis were noted only in the later
stages of orthotopic growth of MM-B1, IST-Mes3 and IST-Mes3/2P cells.
MM-B1 and IST-Mes2 cells did not grow when injected subcutaneously. IST-Mes3
cells started to grow only at forty days after tumor cell injection. This
lag phase was independent on the number of cells injected (Fig. 1).
Immunohistochemical analysis
MPM cells were injected into pleura cavity of nude mice and tumor samples
were collected for immunohistochemical analysis. CD31 staining revealed
that tumor mass was highly vascularized (Fig. 3). For the phenotypic characterization
of tumor mass, a panel of eight markers was used (Tab. 5). Recent findings
showed that Mesothelin and TTF-1 have a limited value in assisting in
the diagnosis of Mesothelioma and therefore were not used [13,14]. CEA
and BerEP4 are adenocarcinoma specific markers and therefore are nor expressed
by mesothelioma. Calretinin and HBME-1 are positive markers shared by
both epithelioid and biphasic variants of mesothelioma, whereas CD15 is
a negative marker. Surface expression of the epithelial membrane antigen
(EMA) is a marker that discriminates between reactive proliferation of
mesothelial cells and malignant mesothelioma. The epithelia of biphasic
mesotheliomas show strong reactivity for Cytokeratin 8/18, whereas Podoplanin
is the most recently recognized marker for epithelioid mesotheliomas.
New strategies for MPM treatment, which include inhibition, of angiogenesis,
induction of tumor cell apoptosis, gene therapy and vaccines [15], need
clinically representative animal models to test new drugs and explore
tumor biology.
In this work we established a non invasive orthotopic model of human
MPM by injecting the cancer cells directly into the pleural cavity of
nude mice. The characteristics of tumor growth resemble those observed
in tumor-bearing patients, with colonization of parietal and visceral
pleura, diaphragm, mediastinum and, at later stages, lung parenchyma.
We analyzed the tumorigenicity of three different human MPM cell lines,
which exhibited different biological behaviors in vivo. Interestingly,
the growth of MM-B1 cells seems to be site-specific as they did not form
tumor masses when injected subcutaneously. Differently, the IST-Mes3 cells
grow subcutaneously with a latency which does not depend on the number
of cells injected (Fig. 1). This resembles some human situations in which
cancer cells start to grow exponentially and form manifest tumor masses
only after a long period of time from the acquisition of the tumorigenic
phenotype.
As previously reported, neo-angiogenesis is an important process in MPM
and protocols to inhibit this process are currently under investigation.
Our model can be useful to study angiogenesis in MPM as tumors displayed
high density of micro-vessels. IST-Mes3 tumor grew with a latency of 60
days and this period remained substantially constant after tumor passage
in mice. All the cell lines tested were unable to form metastases in the
visceral organs, likely due to lack of time for tumor dissemination as
the rapid spreading of the tumor cells into the pleural cavity dramatically
resulted in mouse death. Among the cell lines tested, the MM-B1 cells
seem to be the more appropriate for drug evaluation. In fact, as shown
in Tab. II, the IST-Mes3 cells grow very rapidly to follow the progression
of the disease, colonizing the entire pleural cavity and dramatically
affecting the physical conditions of the mice which become cachectic and
dyspneic, and the latency of tumor takes varies from animal to animal.
The results obtained with the IST-Mes3/2P cell show that these variations
are not observed when ex vivo tumor cells are cultured in vitro.
The growth rate of MM-B1 cells is reproducible. Tumors develop in all
animals with a similar latency and the rate of tumor growth is slow enough
to follow the progression of the disease. In this context, a noninvasive
imaging methodology would be a useful tool to follow tumor development.
IST-Mes2 cells did not grow in nude mice, but, since the epithelioid
phenotype is the most common sub-type of mesothelioma, we plan to set
up an orthotopic model using different ephitelioid cells.
Immunohistochemistry of tumors growing in the nude mice showed that MM-B1
and IST-Mes3 cells maintained the mesothelioma-specific characteristics,
thus confirming the validity of the orthotopic model here established.
Conclusion
Overall, this work describes the biological behavior of human MPM cells
injected in the pleural cavity of nude mice. Because of the similarity
of this orthotopic model with the human disease, the simplicity of execution
and the reproducibility of the results, we propose this model as an useful
tool for in vivo MPM studies.
Competing interests
The author(s) declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
DM performed the orthotopic and subcutaneous implantation of cancer cells
in nude mice, the autopsy and the immunoassays. AC carried out the cells
culture and participated in the immunohistochemical analysis. GS designed
and coordinated the study. PA participated in the coordination of the
study and helped to draft the manuscript. SO and RL performed the phenotypic
characterization on MPM cells orthotopically implanted in nude mice. All
the authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Acknowledgements
We thanks Roberta Lucciarini, Consuelo Amantini and Maria Rita Rippo
for technical advices and help. This work was supported and approved by
the Italian Ministry of Health and the University of Camerino (Italy).
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