Methods to study metastasis in genetically modified mice

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Abstract

Metastasis is often modeled by xenotransplantation of cell lines in immunodeficient mice. A wealth of information about tumor cell behavior in the new environment is obtained from these efforts. Yet by design, this approach is “tumor-centric,” as it focuses on cell-autonomous determinants of human tumor dissemination in mouse tissues, in effect using the animal body as a sophisticated “Petri dish” providing nutrients and support for tumor growth. Transgenic or gene knockout mouse models of cancer allow the study of tumor spread as a systemic disease and offer a complimentary approach for studying the natural history of cancer. This introduction is aimed at describing the overall method-ological approach to studying metastasis in genetically modified mice, with a particular focus on using animals with regulated expression of potent human oncogenes in the breast.

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Kabeer, F., Beverly, L. J., Darrasse-Jèze, G., & Podsypanina, K. (2016). Methods to study metastasis in genetically modified mice. Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2016(2), 117–127. https://doi.org/10.1101/pdb.top069948

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