Literature DB >> 32946982

Detection of chemotherapy-resistant patient-derived acute lymphoblastic leukemia clones in murine xenografts using cellular barcodes.

Sabrina Jacobs1, Albertina Ausema1, Erik Zwart1, Ellen Weersing1, Gerald de Haan1, Leonid V Bystrykh1, Mirjam E Belderbos2.   

Abstract

Clonal heterogeneity fuels leukemia evolution, therapeutic resistance, and relapse. Upfront detection of therapy-resistant leukemia clones at diagnosis may allow adaptation of treatment and prevention of relapse, but this is hampered by a paucity of methods to identify and trace single leukemia-propagating cells and their clonal offspring. Here, we tested methods of cellular barcoding analysis, to trace the in vivo competitive dynamics of hundreds of patient-derived leukemia clones upon chemotherapy-mediated selective pressure. We transplanted Nod/Scid/Il2Rγ-/- (NSG) mice with barcoded patient-derived or SupB15 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells and assessed clonal responses to dexamethasone, methotrexate, and vincristine, longitudinally and across nine anatomic locations. We illustrate that chemotherapy reduces clonal diversity in a drug-dependent manner. At end-stage disease, methotrexate-treated patient-derived xenografts had significantly fewer clones compared with placebo-treated mice (100 ± 10 vs. 160 ± 15 clones, p = 0.0005), while clonal complexity in vincristine- and dexamethasone-treated xenografts was unaffected (115 ± 33 and 150 ± 7 clones, p = NS). Using tools developed to assess differential gene expression, we determined whether these clonal patterns resulted from random clonal drift or selection. We identified 5 clones that were reproducibly enriched in methotrexate-treated patient-derived xenografts, suggestive of pre-existent resistance. Finally, we found that chemotherapy-mediated selection resulted in a more asymmetric distribution of leukemia clones across anatomic sites. We found that cellular barcoding is a powerful method to trace the clonal dynamics of human patient-derived leukemia cells in response to chemotherapy. In the future, integration of cellular barcoding with single-cell sequencing technology may allow in-depth characterization of therapy-resistant leukemia clones and identify novel targets to prevent relapse.
Copyright © 2020 ISEH -- Society for Hematology and Stem Cells. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32946982     DOI: 10.1016/j.exphem.2020.09.188

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Hematol        ISSN: 0301-472X            Impact factor:   3.084


  2 in total

1.  A Cell Double-Barcoding System for Quantitative Evaluation of Primary Tumors and Metastasis in Animals That Uncovers Clonal-Specific Anti-Cancer Drug Effects.

Authors:  Arkadi Hesin; Santosh Kumar; Valid Gahramanov; Maria Becker; Maria Vilenchik; Ilya Alexandrov; Julia Yaglom; Michael Y Sherman
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-08       Impact factor: 6.639

2.  Adverse stem cell clones within a single patient's tumor predict clinical outcome in AML patients.

Authors:  Christina Zeller; Daniel Richter; Vindi Jurinovic; Ilse A Valtierra-Gutiérrez; Ashok Kumar Jayavelu; Matthias Mann; Johannes W Bagnoli; Ines Hellmann; Tobias Herold; Wolfgang Enard; Binje Vick; Irmela Jeremias
Journal:  J Hematol Oncol       Date:  2022-03-12       Impact factor: 17.388

  2 in total

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