Xenografts faithfully recapitulate breast cancer-specific gene expression patterns of parent primary breast tumors

被引:34
|
作者
Petrillo, Laura A. [1 ]
Wolf, Denise M. [2 ]
Kapoun, Ann M. [3 ]
Wang, Nicholas J. [4 ]
Barczak, Andrea [5 ]
Xiao, Yuanyuan [5 ]
Korkaya, Hasan [6 ]
Baehner, Frederick [7 ]
Lewicki, John [3 ]
Wicha, Max [6 ]
Park, John W. [2 ]
Spellman, Paul T. [4 ]
Gray, Joe W. [4 ]
van't Veer, Laura [2 ]
Esserman, Laura J. [8 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Med, San Francisco, CA 94115 USA
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Lab Med, San Francisco, CA 94115 USA
[3] OncoMed Pharmaceut Inc, Redwood City, CA USA
[4] Oregon Hlth & Sci Univ, Portland, OR 97201 USA
[5] Univ Calif San Francisco, Funct Genom Core, San Francisco, CA 94115 USA
[6] Univ Michigan, Dept Internal Med, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[7] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Pathol, San Francisco, CA 94115 USA
[8] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Surg, San Francisco, CA 94115 USA
关键词
Mouse model; Breast cancer; Xenograft; Receptor subtype; Intrinsic subtype; ALDH1; CDK5/6; PAM50; MOLECULAR PORTRAITS; BASAL-LIKE; NUDE-MICE; ESTABLISHMENT; METASTASIS; CARCINOMAS; PREDICTOR; MODELS; GROWTH;
D O I
10.1007/s10549-012-2226-y
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Though xenografts are used extensively for drug development in breast cancer, how well xenografts reflect the breadth of primary breast tumor subtypes has not been well characterized. Moreover, few studies have compared the gene expression of xenograft tumors to the primary tumors from which they were derived. Here we investigate whether the ability of human breast tumors (n = 20) to create xenografts in immune-deficient mice is associated with breast cancer immunohistochemical (IHC) and intrinsic subtype. We also characterize how precisely the gene expression of xenografts reprises that of parent breast tumors, using hierarchical clustering and other correlation-based techniques applied to Agilent 44K gene expression data from 16 samples including four matched primary tumor-xenograft pairs. Of the breast tumors studied, 25 % (5/20) generated xenografts. Receptor and intrinsic subtype were significant predictors of xenograft success, with all (4/4) triple-negative (TN) tumors and no (0/12) HR+Her2- tumors forming xenografts (P = 0.0005). Tumor cell expression of ALDH1, a stem cell marker, trended toward successful engraftment (P = 0.14), though CDK5/6, a basal marker, did not. Though hierarchical clustering across the 500 most variable genes segregated human breast tumors from xenograft tumors, when clustering was performed over the PAM50 gene set the primary tumor-xenograft pairs clustered together, with all IHC subtypes clustered in distinct groups. Greater similarity between primary tumor-xenograft pairs relative to random pairings was confirmed by calculation of the within-pair between-pair scatter ratio (WPBPSR) distribution (P = 0.0269), though there was a shift in the xenografts toward more aggressive features including higher proliferation scores relative to the primary. Triple-negative breast tumors demonstrate superior ability to create xenografts compared to HR+ tumors, which may reflect higher proliferation or relatively stroma-independent growth of this subtype. Xenograft tumors' gene expression faithfully resembles that of their parent tumors, yet also demonstrates a shift toward more aggressive molecular features.
引用
收藏
页码:913 / 922
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Breast cancer-specific serum peptide profiles
    WANG Na1
    2 Chinese People’s Liberation Army General Hospital
    Science Bulletin, 2009, (03) : 421 - 429
  • [22] A gene expression signature that defines breast cancer metastases
    Ellsworth, Rachel E.
    Seebach, Jeff
    Field, Lori A.
    Heckman, Caroline
    Kane, Jennifer
    Hooke, Jeffrey A.
    Love, Brad
    Shriver, Craig D.
    CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS, 2009, 26 (03) : 205 - 213
  • [23] Association Between a History of Breast Cancer and Decreased Thyroid Cancer-specific Mortality
    Lin, Shuhuang
    Wang, Zhuo
    Xing, Mingzhao
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM, 2024, 109 (05) : 1222 - 1230
  • [24] Gene Expression Profiling of Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Primary Breast Cancer Cell Culture
    Minafra, Luigi
    Bravata, Valentina
    Forte, Giusi Irma
    Cammarata, Francesco Paolo
    Gilardi, Maria Carla
    Messa, Cristina
    ANTICANCER RESEARCH, 2014, 34 (05) : 2173 - 2183
  • [25] Specific breast cancer prognosis-subtype distinctions based on DNA methylation patterns
    Zhang, Shumei
    Wang, Yihan
    Gu, Yue
    Zhu, Jiang
    Ci, Ce
    Guo, Zhongfu
    Chen, Chuangeng
    Wei, Yanjun
    Lv, Wenhua
    Liu, Hongbo
    Zhang, Dongwei
    Zhang, Yan
    MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY, 2018, 12 (07): : 1047 - 1060
  • [26] State anxiety and cancer-specific anxiety in survivors of breast cancer
    Rothrock, NE
    Matthews, AK
    Sellergren, SA
    Fleming, G
    List, M
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOCIAL ONCOLOGY, 2004, 22 (04) : 93 - 109
  • [27] Analysis of HOX Gene Expression Patterns in Human Breast Cancer
    Ho Hur
    Ji-Yeon Lee
    Hyo Jung Yun
    Byeong Woo Park
    Myoung Hee Kim
    Molecular Biotechnology, 2014, 56 : 64 - 71
  • [28] Detection of gene expression in sentinel lymph node of primary breast cancer patients
    Soleimani, Shahrzad
    Shargh, Shohreh Alizadeh
    Keramatinia, Aliasghar
    Mehrvar, Narjes
    Mansouri, Neda
    Doosti, Abbas
    Mortazavi-Tabatabaei, Seyed Abdolreza
    Hashemi, Mehrdad
    Movafagh, Abolfazl
    CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2018, 64 (05) : 118 - 121
  • [29] Intrinsic Subtypes of Primary Breast Cancer - Gene Expression Analysis
    Schmidt, Marcus
    Thomssen, Christoph
    Untch, Michael
    ONCOLOGY RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2016, 39 (03) : 102 - 110
  • [30] Surgery improves breast cancer-specific survival in octogenarians with early-stage breast cancer
    Cortadellas, Tomas
    Gascon, Andrea
    Cordoba, Octavi
    Rabasa, Jordi
    Rodriguez, Robert
    Espinosa-Bravo, Martin
    Esgueva, Antonio
    Rubio, Isabel T.
    Xercavins, Jordi
    Gil, Antonio
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2013, 11 (07) : 554 - 557