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Erschienen in: Clinical and Translational Oncology 10/2012

01.10.2012 | Research Article

The SGBS cell strain as a model for the in vitro study of obesity and cancer

verfasst von: Emma H. Allott, Elizabeth Oliver, Joanne Lysaght, Steven G. Gray, John V. Reynolds, Helen M. Roche, Graham P. Pidgeon

Erschienen in: Clinical and Translational Oncology | Ausgabe 10/2012

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Abstract

Introduction

The murine adipocyte cell line 3T3-L1 is well characterised and used widely, while the human pre-adipocyte cell strain, Simpson–Golabi–Behmel Syndrome (SGBS), requires validation for use in human studies. Obesity is currently estimated to account for up to 41 % of the worldwide cancer burden. A human in vitro model system is required to elucidate the molecular mechanisms for this poorly understood association. This work investigates the relevance of the SGBS cell strain for obesity and cancer research in humans.

Materials and methods

Pre-adipocyte 3T3-L1 and SGBS were differentiated according to standard protocols. Morphology was assessed by Oil Red O staining. Adipocyte-specific gene expression was measured by qPCR and biochemical function was assessed by glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) enzyme activity. Differential gene expression in oesophageal adenocarcinoma cell line OE33 following co-culture with SGBS or primary omental human adipocytes was investigated using Human Cancer Profiler qPCR arrays.

Results

During the process of differentiation, SGBS expressed higher levels of adipocyte-specific transcripts and fully differentiated SGBS expressed more similar morphology, transcript levels and biochemical function to primary omental adipocytes, relative to 3T3-L1. Co-culture with SGBS or primary omental adipocytes induced differential expression of genes involved in adhesion (ITGB3), angiogenesis (IGF1, TEK, TNF, VEGFA), apoptosis (GZMA, TERT) and invasion and metastasis (MMP9, TIMP3) in OE33 tumour cells.

Conclusions

Comparable adipocyte-specific gene expression, biochemical function and a shared induced gene signature in co-cultured OE33 cells indicate that SGBS is a relevant in vitro model for obesity and cancer research in humans.
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Metadaten
Titel
The SGBS cell strain as a model for the in vitro study of obesity and cancer
verfasst von
Emma H. Allott
Elizabeth Oliver
Joanne Lysaght
Steven G. Gray
John V. Reynolds
Helen M. Roche
Graham P. Pidgeon
Publikationsdatum
01.10.2012
Verlag
Springer Milan
Erschienen in
Clinical and Translational Oncology / Ausgabe 10/2012
Print ISSN: 1699-048X
Elektronische ISSN: 1699-3055
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12094-012-0863-6

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