Leptomeningeal metastatic cells adopt two phenotypic states Journal Article


Authors: Remsik, J.; Chi, Y.; Tong, X.; Sener, U.; Derderian, C.; Park, A.; Saadeh, F.; Bale, T.; Boire, A.
Article Title: Leptomeningeal metastatic cells adopt two phenotypic states
Abstract: Background Leptomeningeal metastasis (LM), or spread of cancer cells into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), is characterized by a rapid onset of debilitating neurological symptoms and markedly bleak prognosis. The lack of reproducible in vitro and in vivo models has prevented the development of novel, LM-specific therapies. Although LM allows for longitudinal sampling of floating cancer cells with a spinal tap, attempts to culture patient-derived leptomeningeal cancer cells have not been successful. Aim We, therefore, employ leptomeningeal derivatives of human breast and lung cancer cell lines that reproduce both floating and adherent phenotypes of human LM in vivo and in vitro. Methods and Results We introduce a trypsin/EDTA-based fractionation method to reliably separate the two cell subsets and demonstrate that in vitro cultured floating cells have decreased proliferation rate, lower ATP content, and are enriched in distinct metabolic signatures. Long-term fractionation and transcriptomic analysis suggest high degree plasticity between the two phenotypes in vitro. Floating cells colonize mouse leptomeninges more rapidly and associate with shortened survival. In addition, patients harboring LM diagnosed with CSF disease alone succumbed to the disease earlier than patients with adherent (MRI positive) disease. Conclusion Together, these data support mechanistic evidence of a metabolic adaptation that allows cancer cells to thrive in their natural environment but leads to death in vitro.
Keywords: cerebrospinal fluid; tumor; inhibition; leptomeningeal metastasis; cerebrospinal-fluid; electron transport chain; metabolic adaptation; cancer plasticity
Journal Title: Cancer Reports
Volume: 5
Issue: 4
ISSN: 2573-8348
Publisher: Wiley Periodicals LLC  
Date Published: 2022-04-01
Start Page: e1236
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000798513300004
DOI: 10.1002/cnr2.1236
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC7772527
PUBMED: 33372403
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Adrienne Boire
    108 Boire
  2. Tejus Bale
    122 Bale
  3. Ugur Sener
    16 Sener
  4. Yudan Chi
    6 Chi
  5. Jan Remsik
    25 Remsik
  6. Fadi Saadeh
    4 Saadeh
  7. Xinran Tong
    6 Tong
  8. Abigail Saeyun Park
    1 Park