Title: Next Generation Rat Models of ER+ Breast Cancer
Abstract: Despite the prevalence of estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer (BCa), there are no
mammalian models that are immunocompetent and metastasize spontaneously to clinically relevant organs
such as bones. ER+ BCs comprise ~70% of BCa cases and are treated with surgical resection and adjuvant
endocrine therapies. Although the 5-year survival rate is high, risk of metastatic recurrence persists for dec-
ades, and 20-40% of ER+ BCa patients eventually succumb to metastatic disease, most often in bones. Our
limited knowledge of ER+ BCa has been largely derived from oversimplified cell line models and in vitro
experiments. Our available xenograft models exclude the critical immune component while genetically
engineered mouse models (GEMMs) rarely stably maintain ER expression and rely on ER signaling – and
none metastasize to bone, the most frequent site. As a result, very little is known about the initial tumori-
genesis process and bone metastasis of ER+ BCa, which greatly impedes our effort to develop new prevention
strategies or adjuvant therapeutics that can block/treat ER+ BCa bone metastasis. We have developed a
series of rat ER+ BCa models by intraductal injection of viruses to introduce genetic alterations. Our
preliminary data demonstrated that these rat ER+ mammary tumors: 1) developed in immunocompetent hosts,
2) showed endocrine therapy sensitivity or resistance, and 3) readily formed ER+ metastases including in bone
– all of which are key properties that are lacking in existing BCa models. Based on these, we hypothesize that
rat-based intraductal injection models (RIIMs) of breast cancer faithfully recapitulate human ER+ BCa in
terms of tumor initiation, metastasis, and therapeutic responses. We will pursue the following three aims: (1)
To characterize early progression of ER+ BCa in RIIM models. (2) To characterize the metastatic behaviors of
ER+ BCa in RIIM models. (3) To credential ER+ RIIM models in recapitulating therapeutic responses and
resistance mechanisms of human ER+ BCa.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer comprises 70 of all breast cancer cases and primarily
metastasizes to bone, but there have not been suitable mammalian models that mimic the progression of this
disease, which greatly hinders the research effort to understand this subtype of breast cancer and to develop
new and effective therapeutics. In our preliminary studies, we have established novel rat models of ER+ breast
cancer that mimic human ER+ breast cancer formation and metastasis. In this application, we will characterize
these models in detail and credential them for investigating human ER+ breast cancer development,
progression and treatment.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AdjuvantBehaviorBiologicalBiological MarkersBrainBreast Cancer CellBreast Cancer ModelBreast Cancer PatientBreast Cancer geneCell LineCharacteristicsCirculationClinicalClustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic RepeatsComplementCredentialingDataDevelopmentDiseaseDisease ProgressionDrug ModelingsDrug TargetingDuctal Epithelial CellEpitheliumEstrogen receptor positiveEventExcisionExclusionGeneticGenetically Engineered MouseGoalsHistopathologyHumanImmuneImmune systemImmunocompetentImmunodeficient MouseIn VitroInjectionsInterventionInvestigationKnowledgeLaboratoriesLearningLesionLiverLungMalignant Breast NeoplasmMalignant NeoplasmsMammary NeoplasmsMarrowMetastatic Neoplasm to the BoneMetastatic/RecurrentMicrometastasisModelingMolecularMolecular ProfilingMusMutationNF1 geneNeoplasm MetastasisOncogenesOperative Surgical ProceduresOrganOsteoclastsPIK3CA genePatientsPenetrancePopulationPrevalencePreventionPrevention strategyPrimary NeoplasmProcessPropertyProteomeRAS genesRattusRefractoryResearchResistanceResourcesRiskRoleSDZ RADSeriesSignal TransductionSiteSpecimenStudy modelsSurvival RateTP53 geneTherapeuticTumor Suppressor ProteinsVirusXenograft ModelXenograft procedureadjuvant endocrine therapybisphosphonatebonebreast cancer metastasiscancer initiationcancer subtypesclinically relevantdrug candidateexperimental studyhormone therapyin vivolymph nodesneoplastic cellnext generationnovelnovel therapeuticspremalignantresistance mechanismsingle-cell RNA sequencingstandard of caretherapeutically effectivetherapy resistanttranscriptomicstreatment responsetumortumor initiationtumorigenesistumorigenic
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