Igf1r as a therapeutic target in a mouse model of basal-like breast cancer

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Abstract

Considering the strong association between dysregulated insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling and various human cancers, we have used an expedient combination of genetic analysis and pharmacological treatment to evaluate the potential of the type 1 IGF receptor (Igf1r) for targeted anticancer therapy in a mouse model of mammary tumorigenesis. In this particular strain of genetically modified animals, histopathologically heterogeneous invasive carcinomas exhibiting up-regulation of the Igf1r gene developed extremely rapidly by mammary gland-specific overexpression of constitutively active oncogenic Kras* (mutant KrasG12D). Immunophenotyping data and expression profiling analyses showed that, except for a minor luminal component, these mouse tumors resembled basal-like human breast cancers. This is a group of aggressive tumors of poor prognosis for which there is no targeted therapy currently available, and it includes a subtype correlating with KRAS locus amplification. Conditional ablation of Igf1r in the mouse mammary epithelium increased the latency of Kras*-induced tumors very significantly (≈11-fold in comparison with the intact model), whereas treatment of tumor-bearing animals by administration of picropodophyllin (PPP), a specific Igf1r inhibitor, resulted in a dramatic decrease in tumor mass of the main forms of basal-like carcinomas. PPP also was effective against xenografts of the human basal-like cancer cell line MDA-MB-231, which carries a KRAS G13D mutation. © 2009 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.

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Klinakis, A., Szabolcs, M., Chen, G., Xuan, S., Hibshoosh, H., & Efstratiadis, A. (2009). Igf1r as a therapeutic target in a mouse model of basal-like breast cancer. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(7), 2359–2364. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0810221106

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