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Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates

The evolution of gastric carcinogenesis remains largely unknown. We established two gastric carcinogenesis models in New-World nonhuman primates. In the first model, ACP03 gastric cancer cell line was inoculated in 18 animals. In the second model, we treated 6 animals with N-methyl-nitrosourea (MNU)...

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Autores principales: Borges da Costa, Joana de Fátima Ferreira, Leal, Mariana Ferreira, Silva, Tanielly Cristina Raiol, Andrade Junior, Edilson Ferreira, Rezende, Alexandre Pingarilho, Carneiro Muniz, José Augusto Pereira, Lacreta Junior, Antonio Carlos Cunha, Assumpção, Paulo Pimentel, Calcagno, Danielle Queiroz, Demachki, Samia, Rabenhorst, Silvia Helena Barem, Smith, Marília de Arruda Cardoso, Burbano, Rommel Rodriguez
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3140998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21811552
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021988
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author Borges da Costa, Joana de Fátima Ferreira
Leal, Mariana Ferreira
Silva, Tanielly Cristina Raiol
Andrade Junior, Edilson Ferreira
Rezende, Alexandre Pingarilho
Carneiro Muniz, José Augusto Pereira
Lacreta Junior, Antonio Carlos Cunha
Assumpção, Paulo Pimentel
Calcagno, Danielle Queiroz
Demachki, Samia
Rabenhorst, Silvia Helena Barem
Smith, Marília de Arruda Cardoso
Burbano, Rommel Rodriguez
author_facet Borges da Costa, Joana de Fátima Ferreira
Leal, Mariana Ferreira
Silva, Tanielly Cristina Raiol
Andrade Junior, Edilson Ferreira
Rezende, Alexandre Pingarilho
Carneiro Muniz, José Augusto Pereira
Lacreta Junior, Antonio Carlos Cunha
Assumpção, Paulo Pimentel
Calcagno, Danielle Queiroz
Demachki, Samia
Rabenhorst, Silvia Helena Barem
Smith, Marília de Arruda Cardoso
Burbano, Rommel Rodriguez
author_sort Borges da Costa, Joana de Fátima Ferreira
collection PubMed
description The evolution of gastric carcinogenesis remains largely unknown. We established two gastric carcinogenesis models in New-World nonhuman primates. In the first model, ACP03 gastric cancer cell line was inoculated in 18 animals. In the second model, we treated 6 animals with N-methyl-nitrosourea (MNU). Animals with gastric cancer were also treated with Canova immunomodulator. Clinical, hematologic, and biochemical, including C-reactive protein, folic acid, and homocysteine, analyses were performed in this study. MYC expression and copy number was also evaluated. We observed that all animals inoculated with ACP03 developed gastric cancer on the 9(th) day though on the 14(th) day presented total tumor remission. In the second model, all animals developed pre-neoplastic lesions and five died of drug intoxication before the development of cancer. The last surviving MNU-treated animal developed intestinal-type gastric adenocarcinoma observed by endoscopy on the 940(th) day. The level of C-reactive protein level and homocysteine concentration increased while the level of folic acid decreased with the presence of tumors in ACP03-inoculated animals and MNU treatment. ACP03 inoculation also led to anemia and leukocytosis. The hematologic and biochemical results corroborate those observed in patients with gastric cancer, supporting that our in vivo models are potentially useful to study this neoplasia. In cell line inoculated animals, we detected MYC immunoreactivity, mRNA overexpression, and amplification, as previously observed in vitro. In MNU-treated animals, mRNA expression and MYC copy number increased during the sequential steps of intestinal-type gastric carcinogenesis and immunoreactivity was only observed in intestinal metaplasia and gastric cancer. Thus, MYC deregulation supports the gastric carcinogenesis process. Canova immunomodulator restored several hematologic measurements and therefore, can be applied during/after chemotherapy to increase the tolerability and duration of anticancer treatments.
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spelling pubmed-31409982011-08-02 Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates Borges da Costa, Joana de Fátima Ferreira Leal, Mariana Ferreira Silva, Tanielly Cristina Raiol Andrade Junior, Edilson Ferreira Rezende, Alexandre Pingarilho Carneiro Muniz, José Augusto Pereira Lacreta Junior, Antonio Carlos Cunha Assumpção, Paulo Pimentel Calcagno, Danielle Queiroz Demachki, Samia Rabenhorst, Silvia Helena Barem Smith, Marília de Arruda Cardoso Burbano, Rommel Rodriguez PLoS One Research Article The evolution of gastric carcinogenesis remains largely unknown. We established two gastric carcinogenesis models in New-World nonhuman primates. In the first model, ACP03 gastric cancer cell line was inoculated in 18 animals. In the second model, we treated 6 animals with N-methyl-nitrosourea (MNU). Animals with gastric cancer were also treated with Canova immunomodulator. Clinical, hematologic, and biochemical, including C-reactive protein, folic acid, and homocysteine, analyses were performed in this study. MYC expression and copy number was also evaluated. We observed that all animals inoculated with ACP03 developed gastric cancer on the 9(th) day though on the 14(th) day presented total tumor remission. In the second model, all animals developed pre-neoplastic lesions and five died of drug intoxication before the development of cancer. The last surviving MNU-treated animal developed intestinal-type gastric adenocarcinoma observed by endoscopy on the 940(th) day. The level of C-reactive protein level and homocysteine concentration increased while the level of folic acid decreased with the presence of tumors in ACP03-inoculated animals and MNU treatment. ACP03 inoculation also led to anemia and leukocytosis. The hematologic and biochemical results corroborate those observed in patients with gastric cancer, supporting that our in vivo models are potentially useful to study this neoplasia. In cell line inoculated animals, we detected MYC immunoreactivity, mRNA overexpression, and amplification, as previously observed in vitro. In MNU-treated animals, mRNA expression and MYC copy number increased during the sequential steps of intestinal-type gastric carcinogenesis and immunoreactivity was only observed in intestinal metaplasia and gastric cancer. Thus, MYC deregulation supports the gastric carcinogenesis process. Canova immunomodulator restored several hematologic measurements and therefore, can be applied during/after chemotherapy to increase the tolerability and duration of anticancer treatments. Public Library of Science 2011-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3140998/ /pubmed/21811552 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021988 Text en Borges da Costa et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Borges da Costa, Joana de Fátima Ferreira
Leal, Mariana Ferreira
Silva, Tanielly Cristina Raiol
Andrade Junior, Edilson Ferreira
Rezende, Alexandre Pingarilho
Carneiro Muniz, José Augusto Pereira
Lacreta Junior, Antonio Carlos Cunha
Assumpção, Paulo Pimentel
Calcagno, Danielle Queiroz
Demachki, Samia
Rabenhorst, Silvia Helena Barem
Smith, Marília de Arruda Cardoso
Burbano, Rommel Rodriguez
Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates
title Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates
title_full Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates
title_fullStr Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates
title_short Experimental Gastric Carcinogenesis in Cebus apella Nonhuman Primates
title_sort experimental gastric carcinogenesis in cebus apella nonhuman primates
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3140998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21811552
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021988
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