Stromal Metalloproteinase-9 Is Essential to Angiogenesis and Progressive Growth of Orthotopic Human Pancreatic Cancer in Parabiont Nude Mice

Tõru Nakamura, Toshio Kuwai(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Jang-Seong Kim(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Dominic Fan(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Sun-Jin Kim(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Isaiah J. Fidler(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center)
Neoplasia
November 1, 2007
Cited by 45Open Access
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Abstract

We determined whether host matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) 9 is essential to angiogenesis and to the growth of L3.6pl human pancreatic cancer cells implanted into the pancreas of wild-type (MMP-9(+/+)) and knockout (MMP-9(-/-)) nude mice. Four weeks after tumor cell injection, pancreatic tumors in MMP-9(+/+) mice were large, had many blood vessels, and contained many macrophages expressing MMP-9. In contrast, pancreatic tumors in MMP-9(-/-) mice were significantly smaller, had few blood vessels, and had few macrophages. Next, we parabiosed MMP-9(+/+) mice with MMP-9(+/+) mice, MMP-9(-/-) mice with MMP-9(-/-) mice, and MMP-9(+/+) mice with MMP-9(-/-) mice. Two weeks after parabiosis, we implanted L3.6pl cells into the pancreas of the recipient mouse in each pair. Four weeks later, the mice were necropsied. The parabiosis experiment revealed a direct correlation between intratumoral MMP-9(+/+) expressing macrophages, angiogenesis, and progressive tumor growth. Because the expression of MMP-9 by L3.6pl tumor cells was similar in all parabionts, the data clearly demonstrate a major role for host-derived MMP-9 in angiogenesis and in the growth of human pancreatic cancer in the pancreas of nude mice.


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