A protocol for the non-invasive intraductal delivery of aqueous reagents to the mouse mammary gland is described. The method takes advantage of localized injection into the nipples of mammary glands targeting mammary ducts specifically. This technique is adaptable for a variety of compounds including siRNA, chemotherapeutic agents and small molecules.
Herein we describe a protocol to deliver various reagents to the mouse mammary gland via intraductal injections. Localized drug delivery and knock-down of genes within the mammary epithelium has been difficult to achieve due to the lack of appropriate targeting molecules that are independent of developmental stages such as pregnancy and lactation. Herein, we describe a technique for localized delivery of reagents to the mammary gland at any stage in adulthood via intraductal injection into the nipples of mice. The injections can be performed on live mice, under anesthesia, and allow for a non-invasive and localized drug delivery to the mammary gland. Furthermore, the injections can be repeated over several months without damaging the nipple. Vital dyes such as Evans Blue are very helpful to learn the technique. Upon intraductal injection of the blue dye, the entire ductal tree becomes visible to the eye. Furthermore, fluorescently labeled reagents also allow for visualization and distribution within the mammary gland. This technique is adaptable for a variety of compounds including siRNA, chemotherapeutic agents, and small molecules.
The mouse mammary gland is composed of a complex ductal-alveolar tree that converges into a central duct at the nipple. In mice as well as humans, the majority of breast tumors originate in the epithelial cells lining the milk ducts. Current available treatments include intravenous chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery. Localized intraductal treatments have been explored 1-3 and offer significant advantages in terms of reduced toxicity and side effects. However, several challenges remain before these can be applied more widely. The ability to perform comparable procedures in the mouse mammary gland facilitates the characterization of intraductal interventions. Here we present a non-invasive method for the delivery of reagents directly into the mouse mammary duct.
Intraductal delivery of chemotherapeutic agents in both breast cancer patients and mouse models has previously been shown to be highly effective with no evidence of systemic toxicity or long-term histopathological changes 3-6. Furthermore, tumor cell injection and lentiviral vector delivery of oncogenes have been shown previously to be feasible via intraductal injection 7-10.
In addition to drug delivery, this procedure is useful for local silencing of mammary gland genes through intraductal injection of siRNA. Injection of small volumes of siRNA solution is effective without altering the anatomy and physiology of the mammary gland. In our laboratory we have recently shown successful silencing of key mediator genes in transgenic mice that spontaneously develop mammary tumors resulting in prevention of tumor progression (Brock et al., unpublished). We have been able to repeat biweekly injections into the same nipples up to 7 times in 2-week intervals with no visible tissue damage or toxicity.
Intraductal injections can be timed in an adult mouse to address developmentally-specific events relevant to mammary gland development during pregnancy, lactation, and involution or to target later stages during tumor development and progression. Virgin females as young as 8 weeks of age have been injected non-invasively in our laboratory.
1. Preparation of Injection Solution
The volume required will depend on the number and location of the glands to be injected. All 10 mammary glands of female mice can be injected but due to the smaller gland size, gland pairs 1 and 5 are typically injected with 10 μl of solution. All other mammary pairs are injected with 20 μl. These volumes are sufficient to fill the entire ductal tree.
2. Preoperative Preparation
3. Intraductal injection
4. Postoperative Care
5. Analysis of Mammary Gland Tissue
The nipples can be easily localized using a stereomicroscope once hair has been removed in the area surrounding it (Figure 1A). To master the injection technique, it is recommended to inject Evans blue dye and monitor the integrity of the gland (Figures 1B and C). This approach also allows for the determination of appropriate volumes to be injected into each gland as one can visually assess whether the dye reaches the entire ductal system (Figures 1C and 2A). An image of the injected Evans blue image can then be compared to the whole-mounted mammary gland, in which the entire ductal tree is stained with Carmine alum dye (Figure 2B).
Please note that robustness of this injection method is highly dependent on the operator. For example, perforating the duct will result in a mammary fat pad injection and injecting the solution too fast may damage the ductal epithelial cells and provoke an inflammatory response. Successful intraductal injection enables the localized drug delivery to the mammary gland and reduces non-specific side-effects often observed otherwise.
An example image of a gland injected with fluorescently tagged siRNA targeting cyclophilin (a non-essential gene) is shown in Figure 3.
Figure 1. An inguinal mammary gland injected through the nipple with Evans blue dye. A) Appearance of the nipple before injection and B) after injection with 20 μl Evans blue dye. No swelling or tissue damage is observed. C) Upon opening the skin, the dye permits visualization of the entire mammary ductal tree.
Figure 2. Whole-mount analysis of Evans blue-injected gland. A) Representative image of a dissected gland excised from the animal and spread onto a glass slide immediately after injection. B) Whole mount staining of the same gland with carmine dye after fat had been cleared. Comparison with A) confirms that the injected solution fills the mammary ductal tree and the gland is anatomically intact.
Figure 3. Intraductal delivery of fluorescent siRNA. Representative image of fresh tissue sample, excised 48 hr postinjection.
Transgenic and knockout mice are invaluable tools for studying the in vivo role of individual genes in breast cancer. However, it is costly and time-consuming to generate these animals and the gene knockdown is usually ubiquitous which sometimes precludes us from recognizing the specific effects of that gene on the mammary gland. Therefore, a targeted knockdown would alleviate issues of non-specific side-effects and toxicities in other organs.
The intraductal injection of siRNA presented here enables the localized gene knockdown in the mouse mammary gland. It is a rapid method for a targeted and localized drug delivery to the mammary gland not limited to siRNA delivery. Such a mammary gland-specific drug delivery avoids unspecific side-effects and toxicity to other organs and allows for the study of gene alterations at specific time points during mammary gland development and breast tumor formation. There is no evidence of siRNA particles in non-injected glands, the liver or other organs providing further evidence that this method presents a preferred way for localized gene knockdown in the mammary gland. Furthermore, the intraductal injections can be repeated weekly or biweekly over several months to allow for long-term monitoring of therapeutic agents.
This technique opens up the possibility for assaying the intraductal delivery of various reagents to the mouse mammary ducts. Advances in localized delivery in well-characterized mouse models should accelerate the application of non-invasive, targeted therapeutic strategies in humans.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors would like to thank Michael Goldberg for preparing stabilized siRNA solution and Heather Tobin for her assistance with the animals. This study was funded by DOD Innovator Award W81XWH-08-1-0659 to DEI. The postdoctoral training of SK was supported by the Susan G Komen foundation (KG101329). The authors would like to thank Kristin Johnson for preparation of the schematic.
Name of Reagent/Material | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
isoflurane | 2-4% | ||
meloxicam | 5-10 mg/ml | ||
Evans blue dye | Sigma-Aldrich | E2129-10G | 0.2% in PBS |
hair removing cream | Veet | Choose sensitive option | |
stereoscope | Zeiss | Stemi DV4 | |
micro-dissecting tweezers | Roboz | rs-4976 | With a 0.10 x 0.06 mm tip made of dumostar |
Hamilton syringe | Hamilton | 7637-01 | |
33-gauge needle | Hamilton | 7803-05 | point style 4, 12 degree bevel (standard) |
siGLO cyclophilin B control siRNA | Dharmacon | D-001610-01-05 |