In vivo magnetic resonance volumetric and spectroscopic analysis of mouse prostate Cancer Models

BACKGROUND Mouse prostate cancer modeling presents unique obstacles to the study of spontaneous tumor initiation and progression due to the anatomical location of the tissue. RESULTS High resolution (130 µmx × 130 µmy × 300 µmz), three‐dimensional MRI allowed for the visualization, segmentation, and...

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Published inThe Prostate Vol. 66; no. 7; pp. 708 - 717
Main Authors Fricke, Stanley T., Rodriguez, Olga, VanMeter, John, Dettin, Luis E., Casimiro, Mathew, Chien, Christopher D., Newell, Tionanatasha, Johnson, Kevin, Ileva, Lilia, Ojeifo, John, Johnson, Michael D., Albanese, Chris
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 15.05.2006
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Summary:BACKGROUND Mouse prostate cancer modeling presents unique obstacles to the study of spontaneous tumor initiation and progression due to the anatomical location of the tissue. RESULTS High resolution (130 µmx × 130 µmy × 300 µmz), three‐dimensional MRI allowed for the visualization, segmentation, and volumetric measurement of the prostate from normal and genetically engineered animals, in vivo. Additionally, MRS performed on the prostate epithelia of probasin‐ErbB‐2Δ × Pten+/− mice identified changes in the relative concentrations of the metabolites choline and citrate, which was not observed in TRAMP mice. METHODS T1‐weighted MRI was performed on normal, TRAMP, probasin‐ErbB‐2/Her2/Neu (probasin‐ErbB‐2Δ), and probasin‐ErbB‐2Δ in the context of decreased Pten activity (probasin‐ErbB‐2Δ × Pten+/−) mice. Volume‐localized single‐voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (SVS 1H MRS) was also performed. CONCLUSIONS The data presented supports the use of combined MRI and MRS for the measurement of biochemical and morphometric alterations in mouse models of prostate cancer. Prostate © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Bibliography:NIH - No. U54CA100970-02; No. R03CA20337; No. R01CA70896; No. R014CA75503; No. R01CA86072; No. R41NS050141; No. K01CA855022; No. P30CA51008; No. R01CA093495; No. CA09686T32
ArticleID:PROS20392
ark:/67375/WNG-MM68RP6F-N
ACS - No. ACS IRG 97-152
Stanley Thomas Fricke and Olga Rodriguez contributed equally.
istex:1C4B76B2DE0338DADB1543BCAB9656870268FA03
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0270-4137
1097-0045
DOI:10.1002/pros.20392