Distinct nitrogen isotopic compositions of healthy and cancerous tissue in mice brain and head&neck micro-biopsies

Cancerous cells can recycle metabolic ammonium for their growth. As this ammonium has a low nitrogen isotope ratio ( N/ N), its recycling may cause cancer tissue to have lower N/ N than surrounding healthy tissue. We investigated whether, within a given tissue type in individual mice, tumoral and he...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC cancer 2021-07, Vol.21 (1), p.805, Article 805
Hauptverfasser: Straub, M, Sigman, D M, Auderset, A, Ollivier, J, Petit, B, Hinnenberg, B, Rubach, F, Oleynik, S, Vozenin, M-C, Martínez-García, A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cancerous cells can recycle metabolic ammonium for their growth. As this ammonium has a low nitrogen isotope ratio ( N/ N), its recycling may cause cancer tissue to have lower N/ N than surrounding healthy tissue. We investigated whether, within a given tissue type in individual mice, tumoral and healthy tissues could be distinguished based on their N/ N. Micro-biopsies of murine tumors and adjacent tissues were analyzed for N/ N using novel high-sensitivity methods. Isotopic analysis was pursued in Nude and C57BL/6 mice models with mature orthotopic brain and head&neck tumors generated by implantation of H454 and MEERL95 murine cells, respectively. In the 7 mice analyzed, the brain tumors had distinctly lower N/ N than healthy neural tissue. In the 5 mice with head&neck tumors, the difference was smaller and more variable. This was at least partly due to infiltration of healthy head&neck tissue by tumor cells. However, it may also indicate that the N/ N difference between tumoral and healthy tissue depends on the nitrogen metabolism of the healthy organ in question. The findings, coupled with the high sensitivity of the N/ N measurement method used here, suggest a new approach for micro-biopsy-based diagnosis of malignancy as well as an avenue for investigation of cancer metabolism.
ISSN:1471-2407
1471-2407
DOI:10.1186/s12885-021-08489-x