Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4326308 | Brain Research | 2010 | 7 Pages |
Brain metastases from mammary adenocarcinoma constitute the chief cause of morbidity and mortality. Some evidence suggests that stress may contribute to disease progression and metastases. Here we show that acute restraint stress (30 min) induces statistically significant increase in brain metastases of systemically administered luciferase-tagged 4T1-BR-3P mouse mammary adenocarcinoma cells as evidenced by the total brain-associated photons from 5.6 × 107 photons in unstressed controls to 1.7 × 108 photons in C57BL/6 (p = 0.0018) and from 7.6 × 107 to 2.1 × 107 photons in BALB/c (p = 0.004) mice. Acute stress may increase metastases by disrupting the blood–brain-barrier (BBB), through release of corticotropin-releasing-hormone (CRH) activating perivascular brain mast cells.
Research Highlights►Acute restraint stress increases brain metastases of systemically administered mouse mammary cancer cells.