%0 Journal Article %T Potential utility of eGFP-expressing NOG mice (NOG-EGFP) as a high purity cancer sampling system %A Kentaro Shima %A Masamichi Mizuma %A Hiroki Hayashi %A Kei Nakagawa %A Takaho Okada %A Naoaki Sakata %A Noriyuki Omura %A Yo Kitamura %A Fuyuhiko Motoi %A Toshiki Rikiyama %A Yu Katayose %A Shinichi Egawa %A Naoto Ishii %A Akira Horii %A Michiaki Unno %J Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1756-9966-31-55 %X Pancreato-biliary cancer cell lines were implanted subcutaneously to compare the tumorigenicity between NOG-EGFP mice and nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID) mice. To obtain high purity cancer cells, the subcutaneous tumors were harvested from the mice and enzymatically dissociated into single-cell suspensions. Then, the cells were sorted by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) for separation of the host cells and the cancer cells. Thereafter, the contamination rate of host cells in collected cancer cells was quantified by using FACS analysis. The viability of cancer cells after FACS sorting was evaluated by cell culture and subsequent subcutaneous reimplantation in NOG-EGFP mice.The tumorigenicity of NOG-EGFP mice was significantly better than that of NOD/SCID mice in all of the analyzed cell lines (p£¿<£¿0.01). Sorting procedures enabled an almost pure collection of cancer cells with only slight contamination by host cells. Reimplantation of the sorted cancer cells formed tumors again, which demonstrated that cell viability after sorting was well maintained.This method provides a novel cancer sampling system for molecular and cellular analysis with high accuracy and should contribute to the development of personalized medicine. %K NOG-EGFP mouse %K Xenograft %K Cancer %K Stromal cell %K Separation %U http://www.jeccr.com/content/31/1/55/abstract