| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
Technical Advances |



From the Departments of Pathology and Laboratory
Medicine*
and Surgery,
and
the University of North Carolina-Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer
Center,
University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Human tissue xenograft models are currently the only tool for conducting in vivo analyses of intact human tissue. The goal of the present study was to develop reliable methods for successful generation of short-term primary tissue xenografts from benign and tumor-derived human prostate tissue. Primary human prostate xenografts were established in athymic nu/nu mice from eight of eight benign and five of five prostate cancer tissues, collected from a total of 10 patients who underwent radical prostatectomy for the treatment of prostate cancer. An average of 13 xenografts was established per specimen. Two tissue specimens were cryopreserved for >1 month before successful generation of prostate xenografts. After 1 month in vivo, xenograft tissues were harvested and examined regarding: gross evidence of vascularization; tissue morphology; proliferation; apoptosis; and expression of androgen receptor, prostate-specific antigen, and high molecular weight cytokeratins specific for basal cells in the prostate. Direct comparison of the original tissue specimen and the 1-month xenografts revealed similar histology; similar apoptotic and proliferative fractions in most cases; and comparable expression levels and expression patterns of androgen receptor, prostate-specific antigen, and high molecular weight cytokeratins. These data demonstrate that primary human prostate xenografts, benign and malignant, can be established routinely from human prostate tissue surgical specimens, and that the xenografts maintain tissue architecture and expression of key prostatic markers. The development of this methodology, including the technique for cryopreservation of human tissue, will allow multiple (successive) analyses of human prostate tissue to be conducted throughout time using a tissue sample derived from a single patient; and simultaneous analysis of human prostate tissues derived from a cohort of patients.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. Godoy, A. Watts, P. Sotomayor, V. P. Montecinos, W. J. Huss, S. A. Onate, and G. J. Smith Androgen Receptor Is Causally Involved in the Homeostasis of the Human Prostate Endothelial Cell Endocrinology, June 1, 2008; 149(6): 2959 - 2969. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. I. Scher and C. L. Sawyers Biology of Progressive, Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer: Directed Therapies Targeting the Androgen-Receptor Signaling Axis J. Clin. Oncol., November 10, 2005; 23(32): 8253 - 8261. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
W. J. Huss, D. R. Gray, N. M. Greenberg, J. L. Mohler, and G. J. Smith Breast Cancer Resistance Protein-Mediated Efflux of Androgen in Putative Benign and Malignant Prostate Stem Cells Cancer Res., August 1, 2005; 65(15): 6640 - 6650. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
D. R. Gray, W. J. Huss, J. M. Yau, L. E. Durham, E. S. Werdin, W. K. Funkhouser Jr., and G. J. Smith Short-Term Human Prostate Primary Xenografts: An in Vivo Model of Human Prostate Cancer Vasculature and Angiogenesis Cancer Res., March 1, 2004; 64(5): 1712 - 1721. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |