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Molecular heterogeneity of non-small cell lung carcinoma patient-derived xenografts closely reflect their primary tumors

Authors :
Nadeem Moghal
Lucia Kim
Dianne Chadwick
Dennis Wang
Ni Liu
Shingo Sakashita
Maud H.W. Starmans
Melania Pintilie
Nhu An Pham
Chang-Qi Zhu
Vibha Raghavan
Sharon Lee
Igor Jurisica
Dan Strumpf
Frances A. Shepherd
Paul C. Boutros
Geoffrey Liu
Michael F. Moran
Paul J. Taylor
Lei Li
Jiefei Tong
Lakshmi Muthuswamy
Ghassan Allo
Vladimir Ignatchenko
Quang M. Trinh
Christine To
Naoki Yanagawa
Yuhong Wei
Ming Li
John Douglas Mcpherson
Michelle Chan-Seng-Yue
Ming-Sound Tsao
Thomas Kislinger
Source :
International Journal of Cancer. 140:662-673
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Availability of lung cancer models that closely mimic human tumors remains a significant gap in cancer research, as tumor cell lines and mouse models may not recapitulate the spectrum of lung cancer heterogeneity seen in patients. We aimed to establish a patient-derived tumor xenograft (PDX) resource from surgically resected non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Fresh tumor tissue from surgical resection was implanted and grown in the subcutaneous pocket of non-obese severe combined immune deficient (NOD SCID) gamma mice. Subsequent passages were in NOD SCID mice. A subset of matched patient and PDX tumors and non-neoplastic lung tissues were profiled by whole exome sequencing, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and methylation arrays, and phosphotyrosine (pY)-proteome by mass spectrometry. The data were compared to published NSCLC datasets of NSCLC primary and cell lines. 127 stable PDXs were established from 441 lung carcinomas representing all major histological subtypes: 52 adenocarcinomas, 62 squamous cell carcinomas, one adeno-squamous carcinoma, five sarcomatoid carcinomas, five large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas, and two small cell lung cancers. Somatic mutations, gene copy number and expression profiles, and pY-proteome landscape of 36 PDXs showed greater similarity with patient tumors than with established cell lines. Novel somatic mutations on cancer associated genes were identified but only in PDXs, likely due to selective clonal growth in the PDXs that allows detection of these low allelic frequency mutations. The results provide the strongest evidence yet that PDXs established from lung cancers closely mimic the characteristics of patient primary tumors.

Details

ISSN :
00207136
Volume :
140
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........466d1269b5b3cea64b4835c6259f4e98
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.30472