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Quantitative in vivo bioluminescence imaging of orthotopic patient-derived glioblastoma xenografts.


ABSTRACT: Despite extensive research, little progress has been made in glioblastoma therapy, owing in part to a lack of adequate preclinical in vivo models to study this disease. To mitigate this, primary patient-derived cell lines, which maintain their specific stem-like phenotypes, have replaced established glioblastoma cell lines. However, due to heterogenous tumour growth inherent in glioblastoma, the use of primary cells for orthotopic in vivo studies often requires large experimental group sizes. Therefore, when using intracranial patient-derived xenograft (PDX) approaches, it is advantageous to deploy imaging techniques to monitor tumour growth and allow stratification of mice. Here we show that stable expression of near-infrared fluorescent protein (iRFP) in patient-derived glioblastoma cells enables rapid, direct non-invasive monitoring of tumour development without compromising tumour stemness or tumorigenicity. Moreover, as this approach does not depend on the use of agents like luciferin, which can cause variability due to changing bioavailability, it can be used for quantitative longitudinal monitoring of tumour growth. Notably, we show that this technique also allows quantitative assessment of tumour burden in highly invasive models spreading throughout the brain. Thus, iRFP transduction of primary patient-derived glioblastoma cells is a reliable, cost- and time-effective way to monitor heterogenous orthotopic PDX growth.

SUBMITTER: Koessinger AL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7506024 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Quantitative in vivo bioluminescence imaging of orthotopic patient-derived glioblastoma xenografts.

Koessinger Anna L AL   Koessinger Dominik D   Stevenson Katrina K   Cloix Catherine C   Mitchell Louise L   Nixon Colin C   Gomez-Roman Natividad N   Chalmers Anthony J AJ   Norman Jim C JC   Tait Stephen W G SWG  

Scientific reports 20200921 1


Despite extensive research, little progress has been made in glioblastoma therapy, owing in part to a lack of adequate preclinical in vivo models to study this disease. To mitigate this, primary patient-derived cell lines, which maintain their specific stem-like phenotypes, have replaced established glioblastoma cell lines. However, due to heterogenous tumour growth inherent in glioblastoma, the use of primary cells for orthotopic in vivo studies often requires large experimental group sizes. Th  ...[more]

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