Lamellipodin-Deficient Mice: A Model of Rectal Carcinoma

During a survey of clinical rectal prolapse (RP) cases in the mouse population at MIT animal research facilities, a high incidence of RP in the lamellipodin knock-out strain, C57BL/6-Raph1[superscript tm1Fbg] (Lpd[superscript -/-]) was documented. Upon further investigation, the Lpd[superscript -/-]...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chen, Xiaowei, Nagar, Karan K., Wang, Timothy C., Miller, Cassandra L., Muthupalani, Sureshkumar, Shen, Zeli, Drees, Frauke, Ge, Zhongming, Feng, Yan, Gong, Guanyu, Gertler, Frank, Fox, James G
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Public Library of Science 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109443
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3214-4554
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9307-6116
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Summary:During a survey of clinical rectal prolapse (RP) cases in the mouse population at MIT animal research facilities, a high incidence of RP in the lamellipodin knock-out strain, C57BL/6-Raph1[superscript tm1Fbg] (Lpd[superscript -/-]) was documented. Upon further investigation, the Lpd[superscript -/-] colony was found to be infected with multiple endemic enterohepatic Helicobacter species (EHS). Lpd[superscript -/-] mice, a transgenic mouse strain produced at MIT, have not previously shown a distinct immune phenotype and are not highly susceptible to other opportunistic infections. Predominantly male Lpd[superscript -/-] mice with RP exhibited lesions consistent with invasive rectal carcinoma concomitant to clinically evident RP. Multiple inflammatory cytokines, CD11b+Gr1+ myeloid-derived suppressor cell (MDSC) populations, and epithelial cells positive for a DNA damage biomarker, H2AX, were elevated in affected tissue, supporting their role in the neoplastic process. An evaluation of Lpd[superscript -/-] mice with RP compared to EHS-infected, but clinically normal (CN) Lpd[superscript -/-] animals indicated that all of these mice exhibit some degree of lower bowel inflammation; however, mice with prolapses had significantly higher degree of focal lesions at the colo-rectal junction. When Helicobacter spp. infections were eliminated in Lpd[superscript -/-] mice by embryo transfer rederivation, the disease phenotype was abrogated, implicating EHS as a contributing factor in the development of rectal carcinoma. Here we describe lesions in Lpd[superscript -/-] male mice consistent with a focal inflammation-induced neoplastic transformation and propose this strain as a mouse model of rectal carcinoma.