| Literature DB >> 28895944 |
Louise van der Weyden1, Natasha A Karp1,2, Agnieszka Swiatkowska1, David J Adams1, Anneliese O Speak1.
Abstract
The process of metastasis is a multi-stage cascade with prior studies suggesting that the colonisation of the secondary site is the rate limiting step. This process involves contributions from the tumour cells and also non-tumour intrinsic factors such as the stroma and the haematopoietic system. In this study, we present data from screening 810 genetically-modified mouse lines with the experimental metastasis assay where intravenous delivery of murine metastatic melanoma B16-F10 cells was used to assess the formation of pulmonary metastasic foci. To date, these data have been studied with a two-step process cumulating in an integrative data analysis to identify genes controlling metastatic colonisation. We present the raw data, and a description to support fresh analyses where researchers can look both within and across gene sets to further elucidate process that regulate metastatic colonisation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28895944 PMCID: PMC5827107 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2017.129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1Schematic of the B16-F10 pulmonary metastasis screen.
B16-F10 cells are passaged 2 days prior to intravenous administration to ensure they are in log-phase growth when collected. Cells are collected and prepared for administration to wildtype control and mutant mice that are culled 10 days later for counting B16-F10 colonies on the lungs. The total count is determined and for each mutant line (MT1 and MT2) the metastatic ratio is derived by comparing the average of the concurrent wildtype controls and the average of the mutant cohort (see example values given) and significance determined by Mann-Whitney test. Additional cohorts are screened when the Mann-Whitney P value was≤0.0175 and the metastatic ratio was≤0.6 or≥1.6, and all the data combined to run through an Integrative Data Analysis.
Exclusion criteria applies to screen data.
| The exclusion criteria, genotype group it can be applied to and reasoning is indicated. | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Excluded (difficulty dosing) | x | x | This is when a comment was made at the time of dosing that there were some difficulties in ensuring the full dose (0.1 ml) was administered into the vein |
| Excluded (count=0 so presumed failed dosing) | x | x | This is when there were no mets present, and we know that is impossible for a WT (and highly improbable for a mutant) |
| Excluded (count ≤35 so presumed failed dosing) | x | This is when there were less than or equal to 35 mets present, and we know from historical WT data that indicates that the full dose was not administered | |
| Excluded (pathology present at time of necropsy) | x | x | This is when the mouse was found to have some abnormality at the time of necropsy (not present or observable at the time of dosing) that may have an impact on the met count (examples include malocclusion, enlargment of an internal organ, scratching, fight wounds) |
Figure 2Temporal variation in metastasis data.
B16-F10 pulmonary metastasis count values from female wildtype controls of the B6 strain group administered over time (horizontal line at mean with error bar standard deviation, each symbol represents an individual mouse). As there is batch-to-batch variation, mutant values can only be compared to the concurrent controls administered the same batch of cells.
Example of Metastatic ratio stability.
| The metastatic ratio (MR) is shown for two example genes across multiple cohorts. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 31/08/2012 | 5×105 | 3 | 6 | 2.39 | |
| Female | 08/10/2012 | 5×105 | 5 | 10 | 2.23 | |
| Male | 08/10/2012 | 5×105 | 4 | 7 | 3.04 | |
| Female | 31/05/2012 | 4×105 | 3 | 19 | 3.85 | |
| Female | 25/01/2015 | 4×105 | 6 | 18 | 1.08 | |
| Female | 03/03/2015 | 4×105 | 4 | 20 | 0.90 | |
| Male | 03/03/2015 | 4×105 | 4 | 13 | 1.05 | |
| Male | 09/03/2015 | 4×105 | 5 | 19 | 0.93 |
Headings and explanation of Data Record 2 format
| The formatting of Data Record 2 is explained together with a list of all the possible options for some of the key columns. | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBLT1300.4d | CBLT | +/+ | Wildtype | Female | 25-May-12 | 13-Aug-12 | 11.4 | 123 | B6 | 5 | A | C57BL/6NTac | B16-F10 | ||
| Wildtype | Female | B6 | 4 | A | C57BL/6NTac | B16-F10 | |||||||||
| Heterozygous | Male | B6JIco;B6J;129P2;B6Brd | 4.5 | B | C57BL/6J;Stock | ||||||||||
| Homozygous | B6JIco;129P2 | 5 | C | C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>(37.5%);C57BL/6Dnk(25%);C57BL/6N(37.5%) | |||||||||||
| B6JIco;B6Brd;129S5-Tyr<c-Brd> | D | C57BL/6N;C57BL/6NTac | |||||||||||||
| 129/SvEv | E | C57BL/6N(50%);C57BL/6NTac(50%) | |||||||||||||
| STOCK Cdh23<v> | C57BL/6N(37.5%);C57BL/6NTac(62.5%) | ||||||||||||||
| B6JIco;B6Brd;129P2-Tyr<c-Brd> | C57BL/6N(7.03125%);C57BL/6NTac(92.96875%) | ||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(6.25%);C57BL/6NTac(93.75%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6J | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>(12.5%);C57BL/6Dnk(25%);C57BL/6N(12.5%);C57BL/6NTac(50%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(20.3125%);C57BL/6NTac(79.6875%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;C57BL/6N;C57BL/6NTac | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>(32.8125%);C57BL/6Dnk(9.375%);C57BL/6N(32.8125%);C57BL/6NTac(25%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(9.375%);C57BL/6NTac(90.625%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(12.5%);C57BL/6NTac(87.5%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(25%);C57BL/6NTac(75%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>(50%);C57BL/6N(50%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Dnk;C57BL/6NTac | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;C57BL/6Dnk;C57BL/6NTac | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;C57BL/6Dnk;C57BL/6N;C57BL/6NTac | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6JIco;C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;129S5/SvEvBrd/Wtsi;C57BL/6J | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>(34.960938%);C57BL/6Dnk(30.078125%);C57BL/6N(34.960938%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;C57BL/6Dnk;C57BL/6NTac;C57BL/6 | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(47.65625%);C57BL/6NTac(52.34375%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(49.21875%);C57BL/6NTac(50.78125%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(48.4375%);C57BL/6NTac(51.5625%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Dnk | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6JIco;129P2/OlaHsd | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6JIco;C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;129S5/SvEvBrd/Wtsi | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6J(100%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;C57BL/6Dnk;C57BL/6N | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6NTac(100%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6N(21.875%);C57BL/6NTac(78.125%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6NTac;Stock | |||||||||||||||
| 129S5/SvEvBrdWtsi(100%) | |||||||||||||||
| Stock(100%) | |||||||||||||||
| C57BL/6JIco;C57BL/6Brd-Tyr<c-Brd>;129P2/OlaHsdWtsi |