Journal of Translational Medicine (Nov 2009)

Optical imaging of the peri-tumoral inflammatory response in breast cancer

  • Reinhart Verena,
  • Ansari Celina,
  • Kishore Sirish A,
  • Boddington Sophie E,
  • DeNardo David G,
  • Johansson Magnus,
  • Tavri Sidhartha,
  • Knebel Robert J,
  • Sista Akhilesh K,
  • Coakley Fergus V,
  • Coussens Lisa M,
  • Daldrup-Link Heike E

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-7-94
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 94

Abstract

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Abstract Purpose Peri-tumoral inflammation is a common tumor response that plays a central role in tumor invasion and metastasis, and inflammatory cell recruitment is essential to this process. The purpose of this study was to determine whether injected fluorescently-labeled monocytes accumulate within murine breast tumors and are visible with optical imaging. Materials and methods Murine monocytes were labeled with the fluorescent dye DiD and subsequently injected intravenously into 6 transgenic MMTV-PymT tumor-bearing mice and 6 FVB/n control mice without tumors. Optical imaging (OI) was performed before and after cell injection. Ratios of post-injection to pre-injection fluorescent signal intensity of the tumors (MMTV-PymT mice) and mammary tissue (FVB/n controls) were calculated and statistically compared. Results MMTV-PymT breast tumors had an average post/pre signal intensity ratio of 1.8+/- 0.2 (range 1.1-2.7). Control mammary tissue had an average post/pre signal intensity ratio of 1.1 +/- 0.1 (range, 0.4 to 1.4). The p-value for the difference between the ratios was less than 0.05. Confocal fluorescence microscopy confirmed the presence of DiD-labeled cells within the breast tumors. Conclusion Murine monocytes accumulate at the site of breast cancer development in this transgenic model, providing evidence that peri-tumoral inflammatory cell recruitment can be evaluated non-invasively using optical imaging.