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Modeling pancreatic cancer in mice for experimental therapeutics

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbcan.2021.188554

Keywords

Pancreatic cancer; Mouse model; Targeted therapy; Immunotherapy; Cachexia; Parabiosis; Metastasis; Vaccine; Antibody-targeted therapy

Funding

  1. NIH [P01 CA217798, R01 CA195586, U01CA213862, R01CA247471]

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Mouse models have played a central role in understanding and optimizing therapeutic modalities for PDAC, evolving from simple cell line-based xenografts to complex genetically engineered models. They provide new insights and understanding about the pathobiology of PDAC, and have been extensively used for evaluating immunotherapies and other treatments to guide clinical trials.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly aggressive malignancy that is characterized by early metastasis, low resectability, high recurrence, and therapy resistance. The experimental mouse models have played a central role in understanding the pathobiology of PDAC and in the preclinical evaluation of various therapeutic modalities. Different mouse models with targetable pathological hallmarks have been developed and employed to address the unique challenges associated with PDAC progression, metastasis, and stromal heterogeneity. Over the years, mouse models have evolved from simple cell line-based heterotopic and orthotopic xenografts in immunocompromised mice to more complex and realistic genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) involving multi-gene manipulations. The GEMMs, mostly driven by KRAS mutation(s), have been widely accepted for therapeutic optimization due to their high penetrance and ability to recapitulate the histological, molecular, and pathological hallmarks of human PDAC, including comparable precursor lesions, extensive metastasis, desmoplasia, perineural invasion, and immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Advanced GEMMs modified to express fluorescent proteins have allowed cell lineage tracing to provide novel insights and a new understanding about the origin and contribution of various cell types in PDAC pathobiology. The syngeneic mouse models, GEMMs, and target-specific transgenic mice have been extensively used to evaluate immunotherapies and study therapy-induced immune modulation in PDAC yielding meaningful results to guide various clinical trials. The emerging mouse models for parabiosis, hepatic metastasis, cachexia, and image-guided implantation, are increasingly appreciated for their high translational significance. In this article, we describe the contribution of various experimental mouse models to the current understanding of PDAC pathobiology and their utility in evaluating and optimizing therapeutic modalities for this lethal malignancy.

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