Endothelial cells appear to express phosphorylated PDGF-R when they are exposed to tumor cells that express PDGF. Using STI571 to inhibit PDGF-R phosphorylation may, especially in combination with paclitaxel, produce substantial therapeutic effects against prostate cancer bone metastasis.
These data suggest that the orthotopic injection of human prostate cancer cells into the nude mouse may provide a valuable model to study the biology and therapy of human prostate cancer.
Rapid evaluation of new cytotoxic agents and biological response modifiers for therapy of cancer and elucidation of their mechanisms of action require the use of relevant animal models. It is well established that the faithful reproduction of the tumor microenvironment that allows the emergence of subpopulations of tumor cells with the biological and metastatic properties observed in clinical cancer occurs with orthotopic tumor models (transplantable and transgenic). This review summarizes the evidence that phenotypic properties of metastatic cells are governed by the expression of genes that are regulated by interaction with the relevant organ environment. While ectopic models of cancer allow rapid screening of new compounds and transgenic models afford opportunities to study early cellular and molecular events in tumor progression and metastasis, orthotopic transplantation of tumor cells remains an affordable, reproducible and reliable methodology for the study of organ-specific determinants of the biology and therapy of cancer.
Once prostate cancer metastasizes to bone, conventional chemotherapy is largely ineffective. We hypothesized that inhibition of phosphorylation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) and platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGF-R) expressed on tumor cells and tumorassociated endothelial cells, which is associated with tumor progression, in combination with paclitaxel would inhibit experimental prostate cancer bone metastasis and preserve bone structure. We tested this hypothesis in nude mice, using human PC-
This reproducible model of human bladder cancer offers the opportunity to study cellular properties associated with tumor progression and metastasis and is suitable for the evaluation of new therapeutic strategies for invasive bladder cancer.
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