کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
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1995280 | 1064960 | 2009 | 6 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

PurposeTo eliminate the variable of tumor heterogeneity from a novel in vivo model of tumor angiogenesis.Experimental designWe developed a method to navigate tumor neovasculature in a living tissue microenvironment, enabling relocation of a cell- or microregion-of-interest, for serial in vivo imaging. Orthotopic melanoma was grown, in immunocompetent Tie2GFP mice. Intravital multiphoton fluorescence and confocal reflectance imaging was performed, on a custom microscope with motorized stage and coordinate navigation software. A point within a Tie2GFP+ microvessel was selected for relocation. Custom software predicted target coordinates based upon reference points (tissue-embedded polystyrene beads) and baseline target coordinates. Mice were removed from the stage to make previously-obtained target coordinates invalid in subsequent imaging.ResultsCoordinate predictions always relocated target points, in vivo, to within 10–200 μm (within a single 40× field-of-view). The model system provided a virtual living histology of tumor neovascularization and microenvironment, with subcellular spatial resolution and hemodynamic information.ConclusionsThe navigation procedure, termed in vivo microcartography, permits control of tissue heterogeneity, as a variable. Tie2 may be the best reporter gene identified, to-date, for intravital microscopy of tumor angiogenesis. This novel model system should strengthen intravital microscopy in its historical role as a vital tool in oncology, angiogenesis research, and angiotherapeutic drug development.
Journal: Microvascular Research - Volume 78, Issue 1, June 2009, Pages 51–56