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Single Cell Analysis Provides Tool for Choosing More Effective Cancer Drugs

2016-10-13
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        Scientists at MIT and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute say they have developed a novel method to test tumors for drug susceptibility. Using a device that measures the masses of single cells, they can predict whether a particular drug will kill tumor cells, based on how it affects their growth rates.

   

   

   

        The researchers successfully tested this approach with glioblastoma and acute lymphoblastic leukemia. They reported their results (“Drug Sensitivity of Single Cancer Cells Is Predicted by Changes in Mass Accumulation Rate”) in Nature Biotechnology.

   

        “We’ve developed a functional assay that can measure drug response of individual cells while maintaining viability for downstream analysis such as sequencing,” says Scott Manalis, Ph.D., the Andrew and Erna Viterbi Professor in the MIT departments of Biological Engineering and Mechanical Engineering and a member of MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, who is one of the paper’s senior authors.

   

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        In recent years, scientists have been trying to identify genetic markers in tumors that suggest susceptibility to targeted cancer drugs. However, useful markers have been found for only a small percentage of cancers so far, and even when there is a predictive test, it is not accurate for all patients with that type of cancer.

   

        The MIT and Dana-Farber investigators took a different approach, inspired in part by a test that has been used for decades to choose antibiotics to treat bacterial infections. The antibiotic susceptibility test involves simply taking bacteria from a patient, exposing them to a range of antibiotics, and observing whether the bacteria grow or die. To translate that approach to cancer, scientists need a way to measure cell responses to drugs rapidly and to do it with a limited number of cells available.

   

        For the past several years, Dr. Manalis’ lab has been developing a device known as a suspended microchannel resonator (SMR), which can measure cell masses 10 to 100 times more accurately than any other technique. This allows the researchers to calculate growth rates of single cells precisely over short periods of time.

   

        In this study, the team looked to determine whether drug susceptibility could be predicted by measuring cancer cell growth rates following drug exposure. They analyzed different subtypes of glioblastoma or leukemia cells that previously had been shown to be either sensitive or resistant to specific therapies. For glioblastoma, these are drugs called MDM2 inhibitors, and for acute lymphocytic leukemia, the drugs are known as BCR-ABL inhibitors. This allowed the researchers to test whether their approach would yield accurate predictions.

   

        After exposing cancer cells to the drug, the researchers waited about 15 hours and then measured the cell’s growth rates. Each cell was measured several times over a period of 15–20 minutes, giving the researchers enough data to calculate the mass accumulation rate. They found that cells known to be susceptible to a given therapy changed the way they accumulate mass, whereas resistant cells continued growth as if unaffected.

   

        “We’re able to show that cells we know are sensitive to therapy respond by dramatically reducing their growth rate relative to cells that are resistant,” said Mark Stevens, Ph.D., a research scientist at Dana-Farber. “And because the cells are still alive, we have the opportunity to study the same cells following our measurement.”

   

        One major advantage of this technique is that it can be done with small numbers of cells. In the experiments with leukemia cells, the researchers showed they could get accurate results with a tiny droplet of blood containing about 1000 cancer cells. Another advantage is the speed at which small changes in cell mass can be measured, says Anthony Letai, an associate professor of medicine at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, who is working on a different approach to monitoring cancer cells’ reactions to drugs.

   

        “This system is well suited to making rapid measurements,” says Letai, who was not involved in this study. “I look forward to seeing them apply this to many more cancers and many more drugs.”

    The researchers are now using this technique to test cells’ susceptibility and then isolate the cells and sequence the RNA found in them, revealing which genes are turned on.

   

    “Now that we have a way to identify cells that are not responding to a given therapy, we are excited about isolating these cells and analyzing them to understand mechanisms of resistance,” Manalis says.

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