Intravital microscopy of osteolytic progression and therapy response of cancer lesions in the bone.
Eleonora DondossolaStephanie AlexanderBoris M HolzapfelStefano FilippiniMichael W StarbuckRobert M HoffmanNora M NavoneElena M De-Juan-PardoChristopher L LogothetisDietmar W HutmacherPeter FriedlPublished in: Science translational medicine (2019)
Intravital multiphoton microscopy (iMPM) in mice provides access to cellular and molecular mechanisms of metastatic progression of cancers and the underlying interactions with the tumor stroma. Whereas iMPM of malignant disease has been performed for soft tissues, noninvasive iMPM of solid tumor in the bone is lacking. We combined miniaturized tissue-engineered bone constructs in nude mice with a skin window to noninvasively and repetitively monitor prostate cancer lesions by three-dimensional iMPM. In vivo ossicles developed large central cavities containing mature bone marrow surrounded by a thin cortex and enabled tumor implantation and longitudinal iMPM over weeks. Tumors grew inside the bone cavity and along the cortical bone interface and induced niches of osteoclast activation (focal osteolysis). Interventional bisphosphonate therapy reduced osteoclast kinetics and osteolysis without perturbing tumor growth, indicating dissociation of the tumor-stroma axis. The ossicle window, with its high cavity-to-cortex ratio and long-term functionality, thus allows for the mechanistic dissection of reciprocal epithelial tumor-bone interactions and therapy response.
Keyphrases
- bone loss
- bone mineral density
- soft tissue
- prostate cancer
- bone marrow
- bone regeneration
- high resolution
- squamous cell carcinoma
- type diabetes
- mesenchymal stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- high throughput
- stem cells
- optical coherence tomography
- oxidative stress
- cross sectional
- cell therapy
- diabetic rats
- squamous cell
- wound healing
- electron transfer
- childhood cancer