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Brain Tumor Cells in Circulation Are Enriched for Mesenchymal Gene Expression

James P. Sullivan1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsBrian V. Nahed1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsMarissa W. Madden1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsSamantha M. Oliveira1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsSimeon Springer1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsDeepak Bhere4Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MassachusettsAndrew S. Chi1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsHiroaki Wakimoto1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsS. Michael Rothenberg1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsLecia V. Sequist1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsRavi Kapur5Center for Engineering in Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MassachusettsKhalid Shah4Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MassachusettsA. John Iafrate1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsWilliam T. Curry1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsJay S. Loeffler1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsTracy T. Batchelor1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsDavid N. Louis1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsMehmet Toner5Center for Engineering in Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MassachusettsShyamala Maheswaran1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, MassachusettsDaniel A. Haber1Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Boston, Massachusetts
2014en
ABI

Аннотация

UNLABELLED: Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly aggressive brain cancer characterized by local invasion and angiogenic recruitment, yet metastatic dissemination is extremely rare. Here, we adapted a microfluidic device to deplete hematopoietic cells from blood specimens of patients with GBM, uncovering evidence of circulating brain tumor cells (CTC). Staining and scoring criteria for GBM CTCs were first established using orthotopic patient-derived xenografts (PDX), and then applied clinically: CTCs were identified in at least one blood specimen from 13 of 33 patients (39%; 26 of 87 samples). Single GBM CTCs isolated from both patients and mouse PDX models demonstrated enrichment for mesenchymal over neural differentiation markers compared with primary GBMs. Within primary GBMs, RNA in situ hybridization identified a subpopulation of highly migratory mesenchymal tumor cells, and in a rare patient with disseminated GBM, systemic lesions were exclusively mesenchymal. Thus, a mesenchymal subset of GBM cells invades the vasculature and may proliferate outside the brain. SIGNIFICANCE: GBMs are locally invasive within the brain but rarely metastasize to distant organs, exemplifying the debate over "seed" versus "soil." We demonstrate that GBMs shed CTCs with invasive mesenchymal characteristics into the circulation. Rare metastatic GBM lesions are primarily mesenchymal and show additional mutations absent in the primary tumor.

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Цитирований: 2Использованных источников: 0