Abstract

Abstract Colon cancer frequently results in metastasis to the liver, when it becomes the main cause of death. The tumor cell cycle in primary tumors and metastases are poorly understood. We developed a liver metastasis mouse model using a human colon cancer cell line (HCT-116), which expresses GFP in the nucleus and RFP in the cytoplasm (HCT-116-GFP-RFP). HCT-116 GFP-RFP (2.0 × 106) cells were injected in the spleen of a BALB/c nude mouse. The cells subsequently formed tumor colonies in the liver and retroperitoneum 28 days after cell transplantation. Using an Olympus FV1000 confocal microscope, mitosis of the dual-colored colon cancer cells could be clearly imaged in the liver and other metastases. Multi-nucleated cancer cells, in addition to a mononuclear cancer cells and their mitosis, were observed in the primary tumor and metastasis. Multi-nuclear cells were also observed in cell culture of HCT-116 GFP-RFP cells. Multi-nuclear HCT-116 cells may participate in the tumor growth in vivo. A significant difference in mitotic cells count in the primary tumor and metastasis was not observed. Citation Format: Kosuke Hasegawa, Atsushi Suetsugu, Miki Nakamura, Takuro Matsumoto, Hitomi Aoki, Takahiro Kunisada, Masahito Shimizu, Robert M. Hoffman. Imaging of colon cancer-cell mitosis within liver metastasis in nude mice. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2016 Apr 16-20; New Orleans, LA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2016;76(14 Suppl):Abstract nr 4111.

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