AI Article Synopsis

  • - A new gallbladder cancer cell line named GBC-X1 was created from a patient's primary tumor, serving as a valuable model for studying the disease and developing treatments.
  • - GBC-X1 displays typical epithelial tumor characteristics, has a longer population doubling time of 32 hours, and shows a high genetic similarity to the original tumor, confirmed by STR analysis.
  • - The cell line demonstrates resistance to oxaliplatin but sensitivity to drugs like 5-FU, gemcitabine, and paclitaxel, and expresses several important biomarkers linked to gallbladder cancer pathology.

Article Abstract

In this study, we successfully established a novel gallbladder cancer cell line, designated as GBC-X1, derived from a primary tumor of a gallbladder cancer patient. By comprehensively analyzing the cell line's phenotype, molecular characteristics, biomarkers, and histological characteristics, we confirmed that GBC-X1 serves as a valuable model for investigating the pathogenesis of gallbladder cancer and developing therapeutic agents. GBC-X1 has been continuously cultured for one year, with over 60 stable passages. Morphologically, GBC-X1 exhibits typical features of epithelial tumors. The population doubling time of GBC-X1 is 32 h. STR analysis validated a high consistency between GBC-X1 and the patient's primary tumor. Karyotype analysis revealed an abnormal hypertetraploid karyotype for GBC-X1, characterized by representative karyotypes of 98, XXXX del (4) p (12) del (5) p (21) der (10). Under suspension culture conditions, GBC-X1 efficiently forms tumor balls, while subcutaneous inoculation of GBC-X1 cells into NXG mice leads to xenograft formation with a rate of 80%. Drug sensitivity testing demonstrated that GBC-X1 is resistant to oxaliplatin and sensitive to 5-FU, gemcitabine, and paclitaxel. Immunohistochemistry revealed positive expression of CK7, CK19, E-cadherin, MMP-2, CD44, SOX2, and TP53 in GBC-X1 cells, weak positive expression of Vimentin, and a Ki67 positive rate of 35%. Our research highlights GBC-X1 as a novel gallbladder cancer cell line and emphasizes its potential as an effective experimental model for investigating the pathogenesis of gallbladder cancer and drug development.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11399391PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-72830-0DOI Listing

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