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Publication : Review article: How useful are the rodent animal models of gastric adenocarcinoma?

First Author  Pritchard DM Year  2004
Journal  Aliment Pharmacol Ther Volume  19
Issue  8 Pages  841-59
PubMed ID  15080846 Mgi Jnum  J:90199
Mgi Id  MGI:3042679 Doi  10.1111/j.1365-2036.2004.01911.x
Citation  Pritchard DM, et al. (2004) Review article: How useful are the rodent animal models of gastric adenocarcinoma?. Aliment Pharmacol Ther 19(8):841-59
abstractText  Gastric cancer is the second most common cause of cancer-related mortality world-wide. In most cases, it develops via the pre-malignant stages of atrophic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia and dysplasia, following Helicobacter pylori infection of susceptible individuals. A number of rodent models have recently provided valuable insights into the host, bacterial and environmental factors involved in gastric carcinogenesis. Wild-type rodents do not develop gastric adenocarcinoma, but early studies showed that the disease could be induced in several rodent species by chemical carcinogens. More recently, it has been demonstrated that gastric adenocarcinoma can be induced in Mongolian gerbils by H. pylori infection and in C57BL/6 mice by long-term H. felis infection. These models have allowed the importance of Helicobacter virulence genes, host factors, such as gender, strain and immune response, and environmental factors, such as dietary salt, to be explored. A number of transgenic mice with alterations in various pathways, including the immune response, gastrin biosynthesis, parietal cell development, growth factors and tumour suppressors, have also provided models of various stages of gastric carcinogenesis. One model that has proved to be particularly valuable is the hypergastrinaemic INS-GAS mouse, in which gastric carcinoma develops spontaneously in old animals, but the process is greatly accelerated by Helicobacter infection.
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