| Literature DB >> 27029058 |
Sebastian Schölch1, Sebastián A García1, Naoki Iwata2, Thomas Niemietz3, Alexander M Betzler1, Lahiri K Nanduri1, Ulrich Bork1, Christoph Kahlert1, May-Linn Thepkaysone1, Anka Swiersy1, Markus W Büchler3, Christoph Reissfelder1, Jürgen Weitz1, Nuh N Rahbari1.
Abstract
The prognosis of colorectal cancer (CRC) is closely linked to the occurrence of distant metastases, which putatively develop from circulating tumor cells (CTCs) shed into circulation by the tumor. As far more CTCs are shed than eventually metastases develop, only a small subfraction of CTCs harbor full tumorigenic potential. The aim of this study was to further characterize CRC-derived CTCs to eventually identify the clinically relevant subfraction of CTCs.We established an orthotopic mouse model of CRC which reliably develops metastases and CTCs. We were able to culture the resulting CTCs in vitro, and demonstrated their tumor-forming capacity when re-injected into mice. The CTCs were then subjected to qPCR expression profiling, revealing downregulation of epithelial and proliferation markers. Genes associated with cell-cell adhesion (claudin-7, CD166) were significantly downregulated, indicating a more metastatic phenotype of CTCs compared to bulk tumor cells derived from hepatic metastases. The stem cell markers DLG7 and BMI1 were significantly upregulated in CTC, indicating a stem cell-like phenotype and increased capacity of tumor formation and self-renewal. In concert with their in vitro and in vivo tumorigenicity, these findings indicate stem cell properties of mouse-derived CTCs.In conclusion, we developed an orthotopic mouse model of CRC recapitulating the process of CRC dissemination. CTCs derived from this model exhibit stem-cell like characteristics and are able to form colonies in vitro and tumors in vivo. Our results provide new insight into the biology of CRC-derived CTCs and may provide new therapeutic targets in the metastatic cascade of CRC.Entities:
Keywords: circulating tumor cells; colorectal cancer; metastasis; mouse model; stem cells
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27029058 PMCID: PMC5053645 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.8373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Key measurements of the different cell lines after orthotopic injection into NSG mice
| Cell line | Number of inoculated cells | Survival [d] | Tumor weight [mg] | Liver metastases | Liver weight [mg] | CTC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HCT116 | 1 × 105 | 35 | 308 ± 17 | 5/5 | 1894 ± 30 | 5/5 |
| HT-29 | 1 × 106 | 42 | 150 ± 33 (**) | 4/5 (n.s.) | 1776 ± 91 (n.s.) | 0/5 (**) |
| SW620 | 1 × 106 | 67 | 280 ± 28 (n.s.) | 0/9 (**) | 1745 ± 115 (n.s.) | 0/9 (**) |
The day of euthanasia was chosen based on the general condition of the mice; once > 50% of mice showed signs of distress, all mice of the particular group were sacrificed in order to obtain comparable data. All statistical tests were performed vs. HCT116 as control group. One-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-testing was used for real-valued data (tumor and liver weights), the chi-squared test was used for categorical data (incidence of liver metastases/CTC). n.s., not significant; **p < 0.01.
Figure 1(A) Growth kinetics of orthotopically growing HT-29 and HCT116 tumor xenografts in NSG mice. (B) Situs of a NSG mouse bearing a HCT116 xenograft 35 days after tumor inoculation. (C) H & E section of a primary tumor (HCT116). Note the tumor bulk infiltrating the basement membrane (dashed line) and a tumor deposit on the luminal side of the basement membrane (arrow). (D–E) H & E section with immunohistochemical EpCAM staining (brown) of a liver metastasis (D) and a lung metastasis (E).
Figure 2Flowchart of the experimental set-up
Figure 3(A–D) CTCs among blood cells. (A–B) Native images. (C–D) Corresponding fluorescence images after staining with anti-EpCAM-Alexa 488. Note the tip of the capillary used to isolate the CTCs in image A. (E–H) Adherent colonies formed by CTCs 48 h after transfer to in vitro culture dishes. (E–F) Phase contrast microscopy. (G–H) Corresponding fluorescence images (anti-EpCAM-Alexa 488).
Figure 4Transcriptomic analysis of CTC via qRT-PCR
All data shown are ΔΔCt values comparing gene expression in circulating tumor cells vs. bulk tumor cells derived from hepatic metastases. (A) Gene expression of CTC compared with corresponding liver metastases. Positive values indicate increased expression, negative values reduced expression in CTC. Filled bars indicate significantly upregulated (red) or downregulated (green) genes. p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. (B) Heat map depicting the individual ΔΔCt values of individual CTC samples compared to their respective liver metastases. Green squares indicate downregulated genes, red squares indicate upregulated genes in CTC, blank squares indicate Ct values > 35, in this case the gene was considered not expressed.