AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to establish objective criteria for selecting appropriate intestinal-derived cell lines for tumor modeling and drug absorption studies due to the large variety available.
  • Researchers compared multiple intestinal colon carcinoma cell lines with normal and tumor epithelium from patients, classifying them based on traits like migratory activity and chemosensitivity.
  • The findings identified SW480 as highly migratory and linked to poor patient outcomes, while Caco-2 cells were confirmed as the best model for studying drug absorption, highlighting the potential of using public gene expression data for selecting cell lines.

Article Abstract

Background: The criteria for choosing relevant cell lines among a vast panel of available intestinal-derived lines exhibiting a wide range of functional properties are still ill-defined. The objective of this study was, therefore, to establish objective criteria for choosing relevant cell lines to assess their appropriateness as tumor models as well as for drug absorption studies.

Results: We made use of publicly available expression signatures and cell based functional assays to delineate differences between various intestinal colon carcinoma cell lines and normal intestinal epithelium. We have compared a panel of intestinal cell lines with patient-derived normal and tumor epithelium and classified them according to traits relating to oncogenic pathway activity, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and stemness, migratory properties, proliferative activity, transporter expression profiles and chemosensitivity. For example, SW480 represent an EMT-high, migratory phenotype and scored highest in terms of signatures associated to worse overall survival and higher risk of recurrence based on patient derived databases. On the other hand, differentiated HT29 and T84 cells showed gene expression patterns closest to tumor bulk derived cells. Regarding drug absorption, we confirmed that differentiated Caco-2 cells are the model of choice for active uptake studies in the small intestine. Regarding chemosensitivity we were unable to confirm a recently proposed association of chemo-resistance with EMT traits. However, a novel signature was identified through mining of NCI60 GI50 values that allowed to rank the panel of intestinal cell lines according to their drug responsiveness to commonly used chemotherapeutics.

Conclusions: This study presents a straightforward strategy to exploit publicly available gene expression data to guide the choice of cell-based models. While this approach does not overcome the major limitations of such models, introducing a rank order of selected features may allow selecting model cell lines that are more adapted and pertinent to the addressed biological question.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3412164PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-13-274DOI Listing

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