Stem Cell Media Culture of Melanoma Results in the Induction of a Nonrepresentative Neural Expression Profile

Author:

Anaka Matthew1,Freyer Claudia1,Gedye Craig2,Caballero Otavia3,Davis Ian D.1,Behren Andreas1,Cebon Jonathan1

Affiliation:

1. Cancer Immuno-biology Lab, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Melbourne-Austin Branch, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

2. Ontario Cancer Institute, Campbell Family Cancer Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Department of Neurosurgery, John Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Abstract

Abstract The ability of cell lines to accurately represent cancer is a major concern in preclinical research. Culture of glioma cells as neurospheres in stem cell media (SCM) has been shown to better represent the genotype and phenotype of primary glioblastoma in comparison to serum cell lines. Despite the use of neurosphere-like models of many malignancies, there has been no robust analysis of whether other cancers benefit from a more representative phenotype and genotype when cultured in SCM. We analyzed the growth properties, transcriptional profile, and genotype of melanoma cells grown de novo in SCM, as while melanocytes share a common precursor with neural cells, melanoma frequently demonstrates divergent behavior in cancer stem cell assays. SCM culture of melanoma cells induced a neural lineage gene expression profile that was not representative of matched patient tissue samples and which could be induced in serum cell lines by switching them into SCM. There was no enrichment for expression of putative melanoma stem cell markers, but the SCM expression profile did overlap significantly with that of SCM cultures of glioma, suggesting that the observed phenotype is media-specific rather than melanoma-specific. Xenografts derived from either culture condition provided the best representation of melanoma in situ. Finally, SCM culture of melanoma did not prevent ongoing acquisition of DNA copy number abnormalities. In conclusion, SCM culture of melanoma does not provide a better representation of the phenotype or genotype of metastatic melanoma, and the resulting neural bias could potentially confound therapeutic target identification. Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest is found at the end of this article.

Funder

Melanoma Research Alliance and Cancer Council Victoria

Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Practitioner Fellowships

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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