1. Conditionally reprogrammed cells (CRC) methodology does not allow the in vitro expansion of patient-derived primary and metastatic lung cancer cells
- Author
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Sette, Giovanni, Salvati, Valentina, Ilenia, Giordani, Emanuela, Pillozzi, Denise, Quacquarini, Enrico, Duranti, Francesca De Nicola, Matteo, Pallocca, Maurizio, Fanciulli, Mario, Falchi, Pallini, Roberto, De Maria Marchiano, Ruggero, and Adriana, Eramo
- Subjects
Male ,conditionally reprogrammed cells (crc) ,epithelial respiratory cells ,lung cancer ,stem cells ,oncology ,cancer research ,Lung Neoplasms ,Biopsy ,Breast Neoplasms ,Mice ,Settore MED/04 - PATOLOGIA GENERALE ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Humans ,Cellular Reprogramming Techniques ,Aged ,Settore MED/06 - ONCOLOGIA MEDICA ,Epithelial Cells ,Middle Aged ,Phenotype ,Lung cancer, stem cells, conditionally reprogrammed cells (CRC), epithelial respiratory cells ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Mutation ,Female ,Lung cancer ,Neoplasm Transplantation ,conditionally reprogrammed cells (CRC) - Abstract
Availability of tumor and non-tumor patient-derived models would promote the development of more effective therapeutics for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Recently, conditionally reprogrammed cells (CRC) methodology demonstrated exceptional potential for the expansion of epithelial cells from patient tissues. However, the possibility to expand patient-derived lung cancer cells using CRC protocols is controversial. Here, we used CRC approach to expand cells from non-tumoral and tumor biopsies of patients with primary or metastatic NSCLC as well as pulmonary metastases of colorectal or breast cancers. CRC cultures were obtained from both tumor and non-malignant tissues with extraordinary high efficiency. Tumor cells were tracked in vitro through tumorigenicity assay, monitoring of tumor-specific genetic alterations and marker expression. Cultures were composed of EpCAM+ lung epithelial cells lacking tumorigenic potential. NSCLC biopsies-derived cultures rapidly lost patient-specific genetic mutations or tumor antigens. Similarly, pulmonary metastases of colon or breast cancer generated CRC cultures of lung epithelial cells. All CRC cultures examined displayed epithelial lung stem cell phenotype and function. In contrast, brain metastatic lung cancer biopsies failed to generate CRC cultures. In conclusion, patient-derived primary and metastatic lung cancer cells were negatively selected under CRC conditions, limiting the expansion to non-malignant lung epithelial stem cells from either tumor or non-tumor tissue sources. Thus, CRC approach cannot be applied for direct therapeutic testing of patient lung tumor cells, as the tumor-derived CRC cultures are composed of (non-tumoral) airway basal cells.
- Published
- 2018