Memory effects of prior subculture may impact the quality of multiomic perturbation profiles

Author:

Bortel Patricia12ORCID,Hagn Gerhard12,Skos Lukas12ORCID,Bileck Andrea13ORCID,Paulitschke Verena4,Paulitschke Philipp56,Gleiter Lion5,Mohr Thomas17,Gerner Christopher13,Meier-Menches Samuel M.138ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Analytical Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Vienna, Vienna 1090, Austria

2. Vienna Doctoral School in Chemistry, University of Vienna, Vienna 1090, Austria

3. Joint Metabolome Facility, University of Vienna and Medical University of Vienna, Vienna 1090, Austria

4. Department of Dermatology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna 1090, Austria

5. PHIO scientific GmbH, Munich 81371, Germany

6. Faculty of Physics, Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich, Munich 80539, Germany

7. Center of Cancer Research, Department of Medicine I, Medical University of Vienna and Comprehensive Cancer Center, Vienna 1090, Austria

8. Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Vienna, Vienna 1090, Austria

Abstract

Mass spectrometry-based omics technologies are increasingly used in perturbation studies to map drug effects to biological pathways by identifying significant molecular events. Significance is influenced by fold change and variation of each molecular parameter, but also by multiple testing corrections. While the fold change is largely determined by the biological system, the variation is determined by experimental workflows. Here, it is shown that memory effects of prior subculture can influence the variation of perturbation profiles using the two colon carcinoma cell lines SW480 and HCT116. These memory effects are largely driven by differences in growth states that persist into the perturbation experiment. In SW480 cells, memory effects combined with moderate treatment effects amplify the variation in multiple omics levels, including eicosadomics, proteomics, and phosphoproteomics. With stronger treatment effects, the memory effect was less pronounced, as demonstrated in HCT116 cells. Subculture homogeneity was controlled by real-time monitoring of cell growth. Controlled homogeneous subculture resulted in a perturbation network of 321 causal conjectures based on combined proteomic and phosphoproteomic data, compared to only 58 causal conjectures without controlling subculture homogeneity in SW480 cells. Some cellular responses and regulatory events were identified that extend the mode of action of arsenic trioxide (ATO) only when accounting for these memory effects. Controlled prior subculture led to the finding of a synergistic combination treatment of ATO with the thioredoxin reductase 1 inhibitor auranofin, which may prove useful in the management of NRF2-mediated resistance mechanisms.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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