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Drug-Induced Death Signaling Strategy Rapidly Predicts Cancer Response to Chemotherapy.

Authors :
Montero, Joan
Sarosiek, Kristopher A.
DeAngelo, Joseph D.
Maertens, Ophélia
Ryan, Jeremy
Ercan, Dalia
Piao, Huiying
Horowitz, Neil S.
Berkowitz, Ross S.
Matulonis, Ursula
Jänne, Pasi A.
Amrein, Philip C.
Cichowski, Karen
Drapkin, Ronny
Letai, Anthony
Source :
Cell. Feb2015, Vol. 160 Issue 5, p977-989. 13p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Summary There is a lack of effective predictive biomarkers to precisely assign optimal therapy to cancer patients. While most efforts are directed at inferring drug response phenotype based on genotype, there is very focused and useful phenotypic information to be gained from directly perturbing the patient’s living cancer cell with the drug(s) in question. To satisfy this unmet need, we developed the Dynamic BH3 Profiling technique to measure early changes in net pro-apoptotic signaling at the mitochondrion (“priming”) induced by chemotherapeutic agents in cancer cells, not requiring prolonged ex vivo culture. We find in cell line and clinical experiments that early drug-induced death signaling measured by Dynamic BH3 Profiling predicts chemotherapy response across many cancer types and many agents, including combinations of chemotherapies. We propose that Dynamic BH3 Profiling can be used as a broadly applicable predictive biomarker to predict cytotoxic response of cancers to chemotherapeutics in vivo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00928674
Volume :
160
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cell
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
101168570
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2015.01.042