Summary

软琼脂集落形成实验利用识别的致瘤性乳腺癌细胞抑制剂

Published: May 20, 2015
doi:

Summary

Here, we document the use of the soft agar colony formation assay to test the effects of a peptidylarginine deiminase (PADI) enzyme inhibitor, BB-Cl-amidine, on breast cancer tumorigenicity in vitro.

Abstract

Given the inherent difficulties in investigating the mechanisms of tumor progression in vivo, cell-based assays such as the soft agar colony formation assay (hereafter called soft agar assay), which measures the ability of cells to proliferate in semi-solid matrices, remain a hallmark of cancer research. A key advantage of this technique over conventional 2D monolayer or 3D spheroid cell culture assays is the close mimicry of the 3D cellular environment to that seen in vivo. Importantly, the soft agar assay also provides an ideal tool to rigorously test the effects of novel compounds or treatment conditions on cell proliferation and migration. Additionally, this assay enables the quantitative assessment of cell transformation potential within the context of genetic perturbations. We recently identified peptidylarginine deiminase 2 (PADI2) as a potential breast cancer biomarker and therapeutic target. Here we highlight the utility of the soft agar assay for preclinical anti-cancer studies by testing the effects of the PADI inhibitor, BB-Cl-amidine (BB-CLA), on the tumorigenicity of human ductal carcinoma in situ (MCF10DCIS) cells.

Introduction

Both non-transformed (normal) and transformed cells can readily proliferate in a 2D monolayer culture. This form of adherent cell growth is quite dissimilar from that which occurs in vivo where, in the absence of mitogenic stimulation, cells do not often rapidly divide within their microenvironment. The soft agar assay on the other hand is distinct from 2D culture systems because it quantifies tumorigenicity by measuring a cell’s ability to proliferate and form colonies in suspension within a semi-solid agarose gel1. In this setting, non-transformed cells are unable to rapidly propagate in the absence of anchorage to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and undergo apoptosis, a process known as anoikis. In contrast, cells that have undergone malignant transformation lose their anchorage dependence due to activation of signaling pathways such as phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt and Rac/Cdc42/PAK. Therefore, these cells are able to grow and form colonies within the semi-solid soft agar matrix2.

A common use of the soft agar assay is to test whether specific compounds, such as PADI inhibitors, are able to suppress tumor growth in vitro. In general, colony count or colony sizes are quantitative read-outs from the assay that can be compared between control and treatment groups to assess differences in cellular tumorigenicity. Therefore, if one finds that colony formation is inversely correlated with increasing drug concentration, then a conclusion could be drawn that the drug is an effective inhibitor of tumorigenicity in vitro. On the other hand, if the drug does not affect colony formation, the drug is either not at the appropriate dosage or it is not an effective tumorigenic inhibitor. Aside from using a soft agar assay to test the anti-tumor effect of a drug, this assay can also be used to probe the relationship between a specific gene and tumorigenesis. For example, the effect of suppressing PADI2 expression on tumorigenicity can be addressed by PADI2-specific siRNA treatment.

PADIs are calcium-dependent enzymes that post-translationally modify proteins by converting positively charged arginine residues into neutrally charged citrulline in a process known as citrullination or deimination3-5. We have recently found that peptidylarginine deiminase 2 (PADI2) may function as a novel breast cancer biomarker and that PADI inhibitors represent candidate therapies for early stage breast cancers6. For example, we have previously demonstrated that a “pan-PADI” inhibitor, Cl-amidine, suppresses the proliferation of breast cancer cells using 2D monolayers and that the inhibitor suppressed the growth of 3D tumor spheroids6. In this report, we extend these studies, and highlight the utility of the soft agar assay, by testing the efficacy of a new PADI inhibitor, BB-CLA, in suppressing the growth of MCF10DCIS breast cancer colonies7. We note that we used MCF10DCIS cells for this experiment because they are oncogenic derivatives of non-transformed human MCF10A cells and because they contain high steady state levels of PADI2 protein8. We hypothesize that PADI2 enzymatic activity plays a key role in the tumorigenicity of this cell line and that BB-CLA-mediated inhibition of PADI2 activity will suppress cancer progression.

Protocol

1.制备3%2-羟乙基琼脂糖到一个干净,干燥的100 ml玻璃瓶中加入0.9克2-羟乙基琼脂糖(琼脂糖VII),随后加入30ml蒸馏水。 微波15秒,轻轻混合漩涡。重复此步骤至少三次,直到琼脂糖粉末完全溶解。 高压釜中加入含有溶液的瓶子15分钟。 允许琼脂糖解决方案,进一步使用前冷却至室温。存储溶液在RT。 2.编写底层:0.6%琼脂糖凝胶预暖…

Representative Results

软琼脂集落形成测定法可用于范围广泛的应用中记录癌细胞的致瘤性。这种技术的主要优点是,半固体基质选择性有利于细胞,它可以在一个锚定非依赖性方式增殖的生长。此特征主要表现由癌细胞而不由正常细胞。我们主要使用这种技术通过药物测试的肿瘤生长抑制的效果和测试对于过表达或我们的基因的兴趣,包括PADI基因的耗竭的效果,对乳腺癌细胞的致瘤性。这里,我们评估BB-CLA对的PADI2?…

Discussion

的集落形成在软琼脂速率的变化取决于细胞类型9。因此,细胞的数量,以开始与应优化,并相应地调整。一个建议的起始范围为每使用公一个6孔板在5×10 2〜1×10 4个细胞。此外,菌落大小取决于每个细胞的生长速度。因此,一个预定的截止菌落大小是需要的注释下游定量分析单个菌落。这里,菌落大于70微米的被量化,以避免包含非增殖细胞从最初的镀衍生的。

<p class="jove_cont…

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

We are thankful to Dr. Richard Cerione, Dr. Marc Antonyak, and Kelly Sullivan, Cornell University, for providing technical advice, and to Dr. Gerlinde Van de Walle, Cornell University, for sharing their Olympus CKX41 inverted microscope.

Materials

Zeiss Axiopot Carl Zeiss Microscopy 1021859251
Inverted Microscope Olympus CKX41
DMEM/F-12 Lonza BioWhittaker 12-719F
HyClone Donor Equine Serum Fisher Scientific SH30074.03
Penicillin Streptomycin Life Technologies 15140-122
2-Hydroxyethylagarose: Type VII, low gelling temperature Sigma-Aldrich 39346-81-1

References

  1. Hamburger, A. W., Salmon, S. E. Primary bioassay of human tumor stem cells. Science. 197, 461-463 (1977).
  2. Wang, L. H. Molecular signaling regulating anchorage-independent growth of cancer cells. Mt Sinai J Med. 71 (6), 361-367 (2004).
  3. Vossenaar, E. R., Zendman, A. J., van Venrooij, W. J., Pruijn, G. J. PAD, a growing family of citrullinating enzymes: genes, features and involvement in disease. Bioessays. 25 (11), 1106-1118 (2003).
  4. Horibata, S., Coonrod, S. A., Cherrington, B. D. Role for peptidylarginine deiminase enzymes in disease and female reproduction. J Reprod Dev. 58 (3), 274-282 (2012).
  5. Mohanan, S., Cherrington, B. D., Horibata, S., McElwee, J. L., Thompson, P. R., Coonrod, S. A. Potential role of peptidylarginine deiminase enzymes and protein citrullination in cancer pathogenesis. Biochem Res Int. , 895343 (2012).
  6. McElwee, J. L., et al. Identification of PADI2 as a potential breast cancer biomarker and therapeutic target. BMC Cancer. 12, 500 (2012).
  7. Knight, J. S., et al. Peptidylarginine deiminase inhibition disrupts NET formation and protects against kidney, skin and vascular disease in lupus-prone MRL/lpr mice. Ann Rheum Dis. , 1-8 (2014).
  8. Miller, F. R., Santner, S. J., Tait, L., Dawson, P. J. MCF10DCIS.com xenograft model of human comedo ductal carcinoma in situ. J Natl cancer Inst. 92, 1185-1186 (2000).
  9. Fan, D., Morgan, L. R., Schneider, C., Blank, H., Fan, S. Cooperative evaluation of human tumor chemosensitivity in the soft-agar assay and its clinical correlations. J Cancer Res Clin Oncol. 109, 23-28 (2000).
  10. Hamburger, A. W., White, C. P., Dunn, F. E., Citron, M. L., Hummel, S. Modulation of human tumor colony growth in soft agar by serum. Int J Cell Cloning. 1 (4), 216-229 (1983).
  11. Anderson, S. N., Towne, D. L., Burns, D. J., Warrior, U. A high-throughput soft agar assay for identification of anticancer compound. J Biomol Screen. 12, 938-945 (2007).
check_url/kr/52727?article_type=t

Play Video

Cite This Article
Horibata, S., Vo, T. V., Subramanian, V., Thompson, P. R., Coonrod, S. A. Utilization of the Soft Agar Colony Formation Assay to Identify Inhibitors of Tumorigenicity in Breast Cancer Cells. J. Vis. Exp. (99), e52727, doi:10.3791/52727 (2015).

View Video