| Literature DB >> 26043652 |
Bin Chen, Marina Sirota, Hua Fan-Minogue, Dexter Hadley, Atul J Butte.
Abstract
Cancer cell lines are used extensively to study cancer biology and to test hypotheses in translational research. The relevance of cell lines is dependent on how closely they resemble the tumors being studied. Relating tumors and cell lines, and recognizing their similarities and differences are thus very important for translational research. Rapid advances in genomics have led to the generation of large volumes of genomic and transcriptomic data for a diverse set of primary cancer samples, normal tissue samples and cancer cell lines. Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common tumors worldwide, with high occurrence in Asia and sub-Saharan regions. The current effective treatments of HCC remain limited. In this work, we compared the gene expression measurements of 200 HCC tumor samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas and over 1000 cancer cell lines including 25 HCC cancer cell lines from Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia. We showed that the HCC tumor samples correlate closely with HCC cell lines in comparison to cell lines derived from other tumor types. We further demonstrated that the most commonly used HCC cell lines resemble HCC tumors, while we identified nearly half of the cell lines that do not resemble primary tumors. Interestingly, a substantial number of genes that are critical for disease development or drug response are either expressed at low levels or absent among highly correlated cell lines; additional attention should be paid to these genes in translational research. Our study will be used to guide the selection of HCC cell lines and pinpoint the specific genes that are differentially expressed in either tumors or cell lines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26043652 PMCID: PMC4460709 DOI: 10.1186/1755-8794-8-S2-S5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genomics ISSN: 1755-8794 Impact factor: 3.063
Figure 1Spearman correlation between HCC tumors and all cancer cell lines (a) individual pairs (b) grouped by cell line primary site. In the heatmap, each row represents one tumor sample; each column represents one cell line. The correlation level is represented by color: higher correlation shown in red, lower in yellow. The HCC cell lines are labeled in green. In the boxplot, each dot represents the correlation between one tumor sample and one cell line and the red line is the median.
Figure 2Spearman correlation between HCC tumors and HCC cancer cell lines (a) individual pairs (b) grouped by cell line. In the heatmap, each row represents a tumor sample; each column represents one HCC cell line. The correlation level is represented by color: higher correlation shown in red, lower in yellow. In the boxplot, each dot represents the correlation between one tumor sample and one cell line and the red line is the median.
HCC cell lines and their correlations with tumors.
| Cell Line | Correlation (P value) | Sex | Ethnicity/Race | Age | Known cancer etiology or other characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HepG2 | 0.55 (3.4E-4) | M | Caucasian/NA | 15 | No evidence of a Hepatitis B virus genome |
| C3A | 0.53 (1.1E-3) | M | Caucasian/NA | 15 | No evidence of a Hepatitis B virus genome; derivative of HepG2 |
| huH-1 | 0.52 (1.9E-3) | M | Asian/Japanese | 53 | HBs-antigen carrier |
| JHH-5 | 0.51 (3.3E-3) | M | Asian/Japanese | 50 | Small liver cancer observed in the chronic hepatitis; integration of the HBV-DNA was not observed |
| SNU-878 | 0.51 (3.3E-3) | F | Asian/Korean | 54 | One of newer cell lines in the SNU series |
| SNU-761 | 0.5 (5.5E-3) | M | Asian/Korean | 49 | One of newer cell lines in the SNU series |
| HuH-7 | 0.49 (8.8E-3) | M | Asian/Japanese | 57 | Well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma |
| SNU-886 | 0.48 (1.4E-2) | M | Asian/Korean | 57 | One of newer cell lines in the SNU series |
| JHH-7 | 0.47 (2.1E-2) | M | Asian/Japanese | 53 | HBs-Ag positive hepatocellular carcinoma with liver cirrhosis |
| PLC/PRF/5 | 0.47 (2.1E-2) | M | NA | 24 | Malignant liver cancer with HBsAg positive |
| Alexander cells | 0.46 (3.1E-2) | M | NA | 24 | Malignant liver cancer with HBsAg positive |
| Hep 3B2.1-7 | 0.46 (3.1E-2) | M | Black/NA | 8 | Hepatitis B virus DNA was detected |
| Li-7 | 0.46 (3.1E-2) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| JHH-2 | 0.45 (4.5E-2) | M | Asian/Japanese | 57 | Integration of the HBV-DNA was not observed |
| SNU-387 | 0.44 (0.06) | F | Asian/Korean | 41 | Patient treated by transcatheter arterial embolization with lipoidol plus a combination of doxorubicin and mitomycin-C |
| SNU-475 | 0.42 (0.12) | M | Asian/Korean | 43 | Taken from a patient prior to cytotoxic therapy |
| JHH-4 | 0.42 (0.12) | M | Asian/Japanese | 51 | HBs antigen-negative; HCV was not detected |
| JHH-1 | 0.41 (0.16) | M | Asian/Japanese | 50 | Complication of hepatic cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma |
| SNU-449 | 0.41 (0.16) | M | Asian/Korean | 52 | Hepatitis B virus DNA was detected; taken from a patient prior to cytotoxic therapy |
| JHH-6 | 0.39 (0.25) | F | Asian/Japanese | 57 | HBV-DNA was not integrated; undifferentiated hepatocellular carcinoma |
| SNU-423 | 0.36 (0.44) | M | Asian/Korean | 40 | Hepatitis B virus DNA was detected; treated by transcatheter arterial embolization with lipoidol plus doxorubicin |
| SNU-182 | 0.35 (0.51) | M | Asian/Korean | 24 | Taken from a patient prior to cytotoxic therapy |
| HLF | 0.33 (0.64) | M | NA | 68 | Hepatoma, non-differentiated |
| HLE | 0.32 (0.70) | M | NA | 68 | Hepatoma, non-differentiated |
| SNU-398 | 0.28 (0.89) | M | Asian/Korean | 42 | Hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA was detected; treated by transcatheter arterial embolization with lipoidol plus a combination of doxorubicin and mitomycin-C |
Median of correlation coefficients is used.
Figure 3Example tumor samples significantly/poorly correlated to the HCC cell lines. (a) Ten tumor samples significantly correlated with the HCC cell lines. (b) Outlier tumor samples poorly correlated with the HCC cell lines. (c) Principal Component Analysis of the tumors (dark blue and green) and non-tumor samples (light blue) from TCGA, the outlier samples in (b) are shown in green.
Eight tumors poorly correlated to HCC cell lines.
| Sample ID | Gender | Race | Tumor status | Vital status | Grade | Residual | Metastasis stage | Pathologic tumor stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TCGA-BC-A10Q-01A | Female | White | With Tumor | Dead | NA | R1 | MX | NA |
| TCGA-CC-5260-01A | Female | Asian | Tumor Free | Alive | G1 | RX | M0 | Stage IIIC |
| TCGA-G3-A25T-01A | Female | White | Tumor Free | Alive | G2 | R0 | M0 | Stage IIIA |
| TCGA-CC-A3M9-01A | Male | Asian | Tumor Free | Alive | G3 | R0 | M0 | Stage IIIA |
| TCGA-FV-A3I0-01A | Female | White | Tumor Free | Alive | G2 | R0 | M0 | Stage II |
| TCGA-DD-A3A6-01A | Female | White | Tumor Free | Dead | G2 | R0 | M0 | Stage II |
| TCGA-CC-A7IJ-01A | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| TCGA-ED-A82E-01A | Female | Asian | Tumor Free | Alive | G2 | R0 | M0 | Stage IIIA |
| Fisher test (P value) | 0.01 | 0.69 | 0.68 | 0.76 | 0.16 | 0.45 | 1 | 0.16 |
Two-tailed Fisher's exact test was used for associating clinical features to the tumors.
Enriched GO terms and KEGG pathways for over expressed genes in tumors
| Term | P Value | Benjamini (<0.1) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cellular Component | GO:0005576~extracellular region | 8.85E-11 | 2.22E-08 |
| GO:0005615~extracellular space | 2.87E-08 | 3.60E-06 | |
| GO:0044421~extracellular region part | 5.49E-08 | 4.59E-06 | |
| GO:0031226~intrinsic to plasma membrane | 3.24E-05 | 2.03E-03 | |
| GO:0005887~integral to plasma membrane | 4.03E-05 | 2.02E-03 | |
| GO:0005886~plasma membrane | 5.35E-04 | 2.21E-02 | |
| GO:0005626~insoluble fraction | 6.52E-04 | 2.31E-02 | |
| GO:0005624~membrane fraction | 7.56E-04 | 2.35E-02 | |
| GO:0044459~plasma membrane part | 1.44E-03 | 3.94E-02 | |
| GO:0000267~cell fraction | 1.62E-03 | 3.98E-02 | |
| GO:0005792~microsome | 2.90E-03 | 6.42E-02 | |
| GO:0042598~vesicular fraction | 3.65E-03 | 7.36E-02 | |
| Biological Process | GO:0006955~immune response | 4.00E-11 | 6.31E-08 |
| GO:0009611~response to wounding | 9.12E-10 | 7.19E-07 | |
| GO:0006952~defense response | 3.32E-09 | 1.75E-06 | |
| GO:0002253~activation of immune response | 2.74E-07 | 1.08E-04 | |
| GO:0006954~inflammatory response | 4.09E-07 | 1.29E-04 | |
| GO:0050778~positive regulation of immune response | 9.19E-07 | 2.42E-04 | |
| GO:0006956~complement activation | 1.26E-06 | 2.83E-04 | |
| GO:0002541~activation of plasma proteins involved in acute inflammatory response | 1.52E-06 | 2.99E-04 | |
| GO:0006959~humoral immune response | 2.98E-06 | 5.22E-04 | |
| GO:0006958~complement activation, classical pathway | 1.70E-05 | 2.68E-03 | |
| GO:0002684~positive regulation of immune system process | 1.77E-05 | 2.54E-03 | |
| GO:0002526~acute inflammatory response | 2.09E-05 | 2.75E-03 | |
| GO:0002455~humoral immune response mediated by circulating immunoglobulin | 2.55E-05 | 3.09E-03 | |
| GO:0048584~positive regulation of response to stimulus | 6.24E-05 | 7.00E-03 | |
| GO:0045087~innate immune response | 8.20E-05 | 8.58E-03 | |
| KEGG pathway | hsa04610:Complement and coagulation cascades | 1.40E-07 | 1.66E-05 |
| hsa00982:Drug metabolism | 1.78E-03 | 9.99E-02 | |
| hsa02010:ABC transporters | 2.12E-03 | 8.02E-02 | |
Enriched GO terms and KEGG pathways for over expressed genes in cell lines
| Term | P Value | Benjamini (<0.1) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cellular Component | GO:0005882~intermediate filament | 4.05E-09 | 6.65E-07 |
| GO:0045111~intermediate filament cytoskeleton | 5.54E-09 | 4.54E-07 | |
| GO:0005576~extracellular region | 2.00E-08 | 1.10E-06 | |
| GO:0045095~keratin filament | 3.11E-06 | 1.27E-04 | |
| Biological Process | GO:0007186~G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling pathway | 7.66E-11 | 8.79E-08 |
| GO:0007166~cell surface receptor linked signal transduction | 1.82E-07 | 1.04E-04 | |
| GO:0007608~sensory perception of smell | 4.78E-07 | 1.83E-04 | |
| GO:0007606~sensory perception of chemical stimulus | 5.94E-07 | 1.70E-04 | |
| GO:0050877~neurological system process | 7.86E-07 | 1.80E-04 | |
| GO:0007600~sensory perception | 9.35E-07 | 1.79E-04 | |
| GO:0050890~cognition | 8.63E-06 | 1.41E-03 | |
| GO:0042742~defense response to bacterium | 5.24E-04 | 7.24E-02 | |
| KEGG pathway | hsa04740:Olfactory transduction | 4.46E-09 | 2.14E-07 |