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Activation of mutated K-ras in donor endometrial epithelium and stroma promotes lesion growth in an intact immunocompetent murine model of endometriosis

Authors :
Diana R. Licence
Ching-wen Cheng
D. Stephen Charnock-Jones
Stephen K. Smith
Mark J. Arends
Cristin G. Print
Emma Cook
Feijun Luo
Source :
The Journal of Pathology. 224:261-269
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Wiley, 2011.

Abstract

Endometriosis is a common chronic gynaecological condition, affecting 5-10% of women of child-bearing age. Its study has been hampered by lack of genetically tractable models. We transplanted steroid-manipulated, menstrual-like endometrium from K-ras(G12V/+) /Ah-Cre(+/+) /ROSA26R-LacZ(+/+) mice into gonad-intact immunocompetent wild-type mice. This led to endometriosis-like lesion development. Long-term lesion survival depended on the presence of the activated K-ras in the small proportion of the cells in the mature lesion that had undergone Cre-mediated K-ras activation. LacZ activity demonstrated Cre-mediated recombination in both endometrial epithelial cells and stromal cells, and transgenic K-ras expression was confirmed by RT-PCR. The endometriosis lesions developed without exogenous oestradiol supplementation and anti-oestrogen (fulvestrant, ICI 182780) treatment greatly suppressed their growth. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that as in human endometriosis, there was invasion and activation of fibroblasts, endothelial cells, and macrophages, with marked collagen deposition in the lesions. This model provides an opportunity to investigate endometriosis lesion establishment, growth, and regression in genetically tractable, immunocompetent, and hormonally intact mice. Furthermore, for the first time it provides a suitable model to test clinically validated driver genes in a faithful mouse model of the predisposing endometriotic lesion, thus providing the correct cellular context and microenvironment for ovarian clear cell carcinogenesis.

Details

ISSN :
00223417
Volume :
224
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........49dd938ca6172eaecb54306b13ba098e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/path.2852