Conservation of copy number profiles during engraftment and passaging of patient-derived cancer xenografts.
Xing Yi WooJessica GiordanoAnuj SrivastavaZi-Ming ZhaoMichael W LloydRoebi de BruijnYun-Suhk SuhRajesh PatidarLi ChenSandra SchererMatthew H BaileyChieh-Hsiang YangEmilio Cortes-SanchezYuanxin XiJing WangJayamanna WickramasingheAndrew V KossenkovVito W RebeccaHua SunR Jay MashlSherri R DaviesRyan JeonChristian FrechJelena RandjelovicJacqueline RosainsFrancesco GalimiAndrea BertottiAdam LaffertyAlice C O'FarrellElodie ModaveDiether LambrechtsPetra Ter BruggeVioleta SerraElisabetta MarangoniRania El BottyHyunsoo KimJong-Il KimHan-Kwang YangCharles LeeDennis A DeanBrandi Davis-DusenberyYvonne A EvrardJames H DoroshowAlana L WelmBryan E WelmMichael T LewisBingliang FangJack A RothFunda Meric-BernstamMeenhard HerylynMichael A DaviesLi DingShunqiang LiRamaswamy GovindanClaudio IsellaJeffrey A MoscowLivio TrusolinoAnnette T ByrneJos JonkersCarol J BultEnzo MedicoJeffrey H Chuangnull nullnull nullPublished in: Nature genetics (2021)
Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) are resected human tumors engrafted into mice for preclinical studies and therapeutic testing. It has been proposed that the mouse host affects tumor evolution during PDX engraftment and propagation, affecting the accuracy of PDX modeling of human cancer. Here, we exhaustively analyze copy number alterations (CNAs) in 1,451 PDX and matched patient tumor (PT) samples from 509 PDX models. CNA inferences based on DNA sequencing and microarray data displayed substantially higher resolution and dynamic range than gene expression-based inferences, and they also showed strong CNA conservation from PTs through late-passage PDXs. CNA recurrence analysis of 130 colorectal and breast PT/PDX-early/PDX-late trios confirmed high-resolution CNA retention. We observed no significant enrichment of cancer-related genes in PDX-specific CNAs across models. Moreover, CNA differences between patient and PDX tumors were comparable to variations in multiregion samples within patients. Our study demonstrates the lack of systematic copy number evolution driven by the PDX mouse host.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- mitochondrial dna
- genome wide
- papillary thyroid
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- endothelial cells
- high resolution
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- case report
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- single molecule
- metabolic syndrome
- squamous cell carcinoma
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- lymph node
- big data
- peritoneal dialysis
- mesenchymal stem cells
- lymph node metastasis
- insulin resistance
- mass spectrometry
- cell therapy
- pluripotent stem cells
- patient reported outcomes
- tandem mass spectrometry