Ray Durwood B, Merrill Gerald A, Brenner Frederic J, Lytle Laurie S, Lam Tan, McElhinney Aaron, Anders Joel, Rock Tara Tauber, Lyker Jennifer Kier, Barcus Scott, Leslie Kara Hust, Kramer Jill M, Rubenstein Eric M, Pryor Schanz Karen, Parkhurst Amy J, Peck Michelle, Good Kimberly, Granath Kristi Lemke, Cifra Nicole, Detweiler Jessalee Wantz, Stevens Laura, Albertson Richard, Deir Rachael, Stewart Elisabeth, Wingard Katherine, Richardson Micah Rose, Blizard Sarah B, Gillespie Lauren E, Kriley Charles E, Rzewnicki Daniel I, Jones David H
Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA; Department of Biochemistry, Oral Roberts University School of Medicine, 7777 S Lewis Ave, Tulsa, OK 74171, USA.
Department of Biology, Grove City College, 100 Campus Drive, Grove City, PA 16127, USA.
Exp Cell Res. 2016 Jan 1;340(1):1-11. doi: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2015.07.029. Epub 2015 Aug 5.
Cancer cells often arise progressively from "normal" to "pre-cancer" to "transformed" to "local metastasis" to "metastatic disease" to "aggressive metastatic disease". Recent whole genome sequencing (WGS) and spectral karyotyping (SKY) of cancer cells and tumorigenic models have shown this progression involves three major types of genome rearrangements: ordered small step-wise changes, more dramatic "punctuated evolution" (chromoplexy), and large catastrophic steps (chromothripsis) which all occur in random combinations to generate near infinite numbers of stochastically rearranged metastatic cancer cell genomes. This paper describes a series of mouse cell lines developed sequentially to mimic this type of progression. This starts with the new GhrasT-NIH/Swiss cell line that was produced from the NIH/3T3 cell line that had been transformed by transfection with HRAS oncogene DNA from the T24 human bladder carcinoma. These GhrasT-NIH/Swiss cells were injected s.c. into NIH/Swiss mice to produce primary tumors from which one was used to establish the T1-A cell line. T1-A cells injected i.v. into the tail vein of a NIH/Swiss mouse produced a local metastatic tumor near the base of the tail from which the T2-A cell line was established. T2-A cells injected i.v. into the tail vein of a nude NIH/Swiss mouse produced metastases in the liver and one lung from which the T3-HA (H=hepatic) and T3-PA (P=pulmonary) cell lines were developed, respectively. T3-HA cells injected i.v. into a nude mouse produced a metastasis in the lung from which the T4-PA cell line was established. PCR analysis indicated the human T24 HRAS oncogene was carried along with each in vitro/in vivo transfer step and found in the T2-A and T4-PA cell lines. Light photomicrographs indicate that all transformed cells are morphologically similar. GhrasT-NIH/Swiss cells injected s.c. produced tumors in 4% of NIH/Swiss mice in 6-10 weeks; T1-A cells injected s.c. produced tumors in 100% of NIH/Swiss mice in 7-10 days. T1-A, T-2A, T3-HA and T4-PA cells when injected i.v. into the tail produced local metastasis in non-nude or nude NIH/Swiss mice. T4-PA cells were more widely metastatic than T3-HA cells when injected i.v. into nude mice. Evaluation of the injected mice indicated a general increase in metastatic potential of each cell line in the progression as compared to the GhrasT-NIH/3T3 transformed cells. A new photomicrographic technique to follow growth rates within six preselected 2×2mm(2) grids per plate is described. Average doubling times of the transformed cells GhrasT-NIH/3T3 (17h), T1A (17.5h), T2A (15.5h), T3-HA (17.5h) and T4-PA (18.5h) (average 17.2h) were significantly faster (P=0.006) than NIH Swiss primary embryonic cells and NIH/3T3 cells (22 h each). This cell series is currently used in this lab for studies of cancer cell inhibitors, mitochondrial biogenesis and gene expression and is available for further study by other investigators for intra- and inter-laboratory comparisons of WGS, transcriptome sequencing, SKY and other analyses. The genome rearrangements in these cells together with their phenotypic properties may help provide more insights into how one tumorigenic progression occurred to produce the various cell lines that led to the highly metastatic T4-PA cell line.
癌细胞通常会逐步产生,从“正常”到“癌前”,再到“转化”、“局部转移”、“转移性疾病”,直至“侵袭性转移性疾病”。最近对癌细胞和致瘤模型进行的全基因组测序(WGS)和光谱核型分析(SKY)表明,这种进展涉及三种主要类型的基因组重排:有序的小步变化、更显著的“间断进化”(染色体复杂变化)以及大规模灾难性变化(染色体碎裂),这些变化以随机组合的方式发生,从而产生近乎无限数量的随机重排的转移性癌细胞基因组。本文描述了一系列为模拟这种进展而依次开发的小鼠细胞系。这一过程始于新的GhrasT-NIH/Swiss细胞系,它是由用来自T24人膀胱癌的HRAS癌基因DNA转染而转化的NIH/3T3细胞系产生的。将这些GhrasT-NIH/Swiss细胞皮下注射到NIH/Swiss小鼠体内以产生原发性肿瘤,其中一个原发性肿瘤被用于建立T1-A细胞系。将T1-A细胞静脉注射到NIH/Swiss小鼠的尾静脉中,在尾巴根部附近产生了局部转移性肿瘤,从中建立了T2-A细胞系。将T2-A细胞静脉注射到裸NIH/Swiss小鼠的尾静脉中,在肝脏和一个肺中产生了转移灶,分别从中开发出了T3-HA(H = 肝脏)和T3-PA(P = 肺)细胞系。将T3-HA细胞静脉注射到裸鼠体内,在肺中产生了转移灶,从中建立了T4-PA细胞系。PCR分析表明,人类T24 HRAS癌基因在每个体外/体内转移步骤中都被携带,并在T2-A和T4-PA细胞系中被发现。光学显微镜照片表明,所有转化细胞在形态上相似。皮下注射GhrasT-NIH/Swiss细胞在6 - 10周内使4%的NIH/Swiss小鼠产生肿瘤;皮下注射T1-A细胞在7 - 10天内使100%的NIH/Swiss小鼠产生肿瘤。当将T1-A、T-2A、T3-HA和T4-PA细胞静脉注射到尾巴中时,在非裸或裸NIH/Swiss小鼠中产生了局部转移。当静脉注射到裸鼠体内时,T4-PA细胞比T3-HA细胞具有更广泛的转移性。对注射小鼠的评估表明,与GhrasT-NIH/3T3转化细胞相比,每个细胞系在进展过程中的转移潜能普遍增加。描述了一种新的显微摄影技术,用于跟踪每板六个预先选定的2×2mm²网格内的生长速率。转化细胞GhrasT-NIH/3T3(平均17小时))、T1A(17.5小时)、T2A(15.5小时)、T3-HA(17.5小时)和T4-PA(18.5小时)(平均17.2小时)的平均倍增时间比NIH Swiss原代胚胎细胞和NIH/3T3细胞(各22小时)显著更快(P = 0.006)。这个细胞系目前在本实验室用于癌细胞抑制剂、线粒体生物发生和基因表达的研究,可供其他研究人员进一步研究,用于全基因组测序、转录组测序、光谱核型分析和其他分析的实验室内部和实验室间比较。这些细胞中的基因组重排及其表型特性可能有助于更深入地了解一种致瘤进展是如何发生的,从而产生了导致高转移性T4-PA细胞系的各种细胞系。