Engineering a humanized bone organ model in mice to study bone metastases.
Laure C MartineBoris M HolzapfelJacqui A McGovernFerdinand WagnerVerena M QuentParisa HesamiFelix M WunnerCedryck VaquetteElena M De-Juan-PardoToby D BrownBianca NowlanDan Jing WuCosmo Orlando HutmacherDavide MoiTatiana OussenkoElia PiccininiPeter W ZandstraRoberta MazzieriJean-Pierre LévesquePaul D DaltonAnna V TaubenbergerDietmar Werner HutmacherPublished in: Nature protocols (2017)
Current in vivo models for investigating human primary bone tumors and cancer metastasis to the bone rely on the injection of human cancer cells into the mouse skeleton. This approach does not mimic species-specific mechanisms occurring in human diseases and may preclude successful clinical translation. We have developed a protocol to engineer humanized bone within immunodeficient hosts, which can be adapted to study the interactions between human cancer cells and a humanized bone microenvironment in vivo. A researcher trained in the principles of tissue engineering will be able to execute the protocol and yield study results within 4-6 months. Additive biomanufactured scaffolds seeded and cultured with human bone-forming cells are implanted ectopically in combination with osteogenic factors into mice to generate a physiological bone 'organ', which is partially humanized. The model comprises human bone cells and secreted extracellular matrix (ECM); however, other components of the engineered tissue, such as the vasculature, are of murine origin. The model can be further humanized through the engraftment of human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that can lead to human hematopoiesis within the murine host. The humanized organ bone model has been well characterized and validated and allows dissection of some of the mechanisms of the bone metastatic processes in prostate and breast cancer.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- bone mineral density
- stem cells
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- extracellular matrix
- prostate cancer
- soft tissue
- randomized controlled trial
- small cell lung cancer
- bone regeneration
- squamous cell carcinoma
- mesenchymal stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- body composition
- cell death
- monoclonal antibody
- signaling pathway
- adipose tissue
- ultrasound guided
- cell therapy