| Literature DB >> 33415568 |
Jenna Kitz1,2, David Goodale1, Carl Postenka1, Lori E Lowes3, Alison L Allan4,5,6,7.
Abstract
Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) present an opportunity to detect/monitor metastasis throughout disease progression. The CellSearch® is currently the only FDA-approved technology for CTC detection in patients. The main limitation of this system is its reliance on epithelial markers for CTC isolation/enumeration, which reduces its ability to detect more aggressive mesenchymal CTCs that are generated during metastasis via epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). This Technical Note describes and validates two EMT-independent CTC analysis protocols; one for human samples using Parsortix® and one for mouse samples using VyCap. Parsortix® identifies significantly more mesenchymal human CTCs compared to the clinical CellSearch® test, and VyCap identifies significantly more CTCs compared to our mouse CellSearch® protocol regardless of EMT status. Recovery and downstream molecular characterization of CTCs is highly feasible using both Parsortix® and VyCap. The described CTC protocols can be used by investigators to study CTC generation, EMT and metastasis in both pre-clinical models and clinical samples.Entities:
Keywords: CellSearch®; Circulating tumor cells; Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; Metastasis; Parsortix®; VyCap
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33415568 PMCID: PMC7882592 DOI: 10.1007/s10585-020-10070-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Metastasis ISSN: 0262-0898 Impact factor: 5.150