Kluwe Lan, Jiang Wei, Alster Ina, Hanken Henning
Laboratory for Tumor Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Department of Neurology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Biomed Pap Med Fac Univ Palacky Olomouc Czech Repub. 2016 Mar;160(1):64-9. doi: 10.5507/bp.2015.057. Epub 2015 Nov 10.
To develop an in vitro tool for assessing the efficacy and toxicity of anticancer drugs using mixed culture containing both tumor and non-tumor cells. Such in vitro tool should have high application potential in drug-screening and personalized cancer care.
Fibroblasts were spiked as non-tumor cells into tumor cells of an established line. The mixed culture was treated with a test drug at various concentrations. After the treatment, DNA was prepared directly from the survived adhesive cells in the wells of the 96-well plates using a simple and inexpensive method, and subjected to digital PCR for measuring relative copy numbers of a target gene NF1 to that of a reference gene RPP30. The NF1 gene is known to be heterozygously deleted in these tumor cells while the RPP30 gene has two copies in both tumor and non-tumor cells. Using the NF1/ RPP30 ratios resulting from the dual digital PCR assay, the proportions of tumor cells were calculated for each drug concentration.
Digital PCR confirmed that the tumor cells have only one copy of the NF1 gene while the non-tumor fibroblasts have two copies. By contrast, both types of cells have two copies of the reference gene RPP30. Using the ratio of the two genes, we successfully calculated the proportion of tumor cells which decreased as the dose of the test drug increased up to a certain concentration, indicating that the drug is more effective for the tumor cells than for the non-tumor cells in this dose-range. At the highest dose, we observed a slight increase in the proportion of tumor cells, likely reflecting the toxic effect of the drug on both tumor and non-tumor cells.
This pilot study demonstrated the feasibility of a genetic- and cell-based tool for testing efficacy and toxicity of anticancer drugs in vitro. The promising results suggest that additional efforts are merited, for further development since such a tool will likely have high application potential (1) in drug discovery where it enables simultaneously assessing therapeutic effect on target cells and toxic effect on non-target cells, and (2) in personalized adjuvant chemotherapy where multiple drugs can be tested in primary cultures derived from surgically removed tumor.
开发一种体外工具,使用包含肿瘤细胞和非肿瘤细胞的混合培养物来评估抗癌药物的疗效和毒性。这种体外工具在药物筛选和个性化癌症治疗中应具有很高的应用潜力。
将成纤维细胞作为非肿瘤细胞添加到已建立细胞系的肿瘤细胞中。用不同浓度的测试药物处理混合培养物。处理后,使用一种简单且廉价的方法直接从96孔板孔中存活的贴壁细胞制备DNA,并进行数字PCR以测量靶基因NF1与参考基因RPP30的相对拷贝数。已知NF1基因在这些肿瘤细胞中杂合缺失,而RPP30基因在肿瘤细胞和非肿瘤细胞中均有两个拷贝。使用双数字PCR测定产生的NF1/RPP30比率,计算每种药物浓度下肿瘤细胞的比例。
数字PCR证实肿瘤细胞只有一个NF1基因拷贝,而非肿瘤成纤维细胞有两个拷贝。相比之下,两种细胞类型都有两个参考基因RPP30的拷贝。使用这两个基因的比率,我们成功计算出肿瘤细胞的比例,该比例随着测试药物剂量增加到一定浓度而降低,表明在该剂量范围内该药物对肿瘤细胞比对非肿瘤细胞更有效。在最高剂量时,我们观察到肿瘤细胞比例略有增加,这可能反映了药物对肿瘤细胞和非肿瘤细胞的毒性作用。
这项初步研究证明了一种基于基因和细胞的工具在体外测试抗癌药物疗效和毒性的可行性。这些有前景的结果表明值得进一步努力进行开发,因为这样的工具可能具有很高的应用潜力:(1)在药物发现中,它能够同时评估对靶细胞的治疗效果和对非靶细胞的毒性作用;(2)在个性化辅助化疗中,可以在手术切除肿瘤的原代培养物中测试多种药物。