Journal article

Obesity does not promote tumorigenesis of localized patientderived prostate cancer xenografts

JCY Lo, AK Clark, N Ascui, M Frydenberg, GP Risbridger, RA Taylor, MJ Watt

Oncotarget | IMPACT JOURNALS LLC | Published : 2016

Abstract

There are established epidemiological links between obesity and the severity of prostate cancer. We directly tested this relationship by assessing tumorigenicity of patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) of moderate-grade localized prostate cancer in lean and obese severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice. Mice were rendered obese and insulin resistant by high-fat feeding for 6 weeks prior to transplantation, and PDXs were assessed 10 weeks thereafter. Histological analysis of PDX grafts showed no differences in tumor pathology, prostate-specific antigen, androgen receptor and homeobox protein Nkx-3.1 expression, or proliferation index in lean versus obese mice. Whilst systemic obesity per se..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Victorian Cancer Agency


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (Concept Grant, NCG 3313) and the Diabetes Australia Research Trust. MJ Watt (ID: APP1077703) and GP Risbridger (ID: 1102752) are supported by research fellowships from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (ID: APP1077703) and RA Taylor is supported by a research fellowship from the Victorian Cancer Agency (MCRF15023). N Ascui received a scholarship from the Victorian Prostate Cancer Research Consortium.