Phenotypically wild-type astrocytes and neural stem cells harvested from mice engineered with floxed, conditional oncogenic alleles and transformed via viral Cre-mediated recombination can be used to model astrocytoma pathogenesis in vitro and in vivo by orthotopic injection of transformed cells into brains of syngeneic, immune-competent littermates.
Current astrocytoma models are limited in their ability to define the roles of oncogenic mutations in specific brain cell types during disease pathogenesis and their utility for preclinical drug development. In order to design a better model system for these applications, phenotypically wild-type cortical astrocytes and neural stem cells (NSC) from conditional, genetically engineered mice (GEM) that harbor various combinations of floxed oncogenic alleles were harvested and grown in culture. Genetic recombination was induced in vitro using adenoviral Cre-mediated recombination, resulting in expression of mutated oncogenes and deletion of tumor suppressor genes. The phenotypic consequences of these mutations were defined by measuring proliferation, transformation, and drug response in vitro. Orthotopic allograft models, whereby transformed cells are stereotactically injected into the brains of immune-competent, syngeneic littermates, were developed to define the role of oncogenic mutations and cell type on tumorigenesis in vivo. Unlike most established human glioblastoma cell line xenografts, injection of transformed GEM-derived cortical astrocytes into the brains of immune-competent littermates produced astrocytomas, including the most aggressive subtype, glioblastoma, that recapitulated the histopathological hallmarks of human astrocytomas, including diffuse invasion of normal brain parenchyma. Bioluminescence imaging of orthotopic allografts from transformed astrocytes engineered to express luciferase was utilized to monitor in vivo tumor growth over time. Thus, astrocytoma models using astrocytes and NSC harvested from GEM with conditional oncogenic alleles provide an integrated system to study the genetics and cell biology of astrocytoma pathogenesis in vitro and in vivo and may be useful in preclinical drug development for these devastating diseases.
Astrocytomas are the most common primary brain tumor and glioblastoma (GBM), a grade IV astrocytoma, is the most common and aggressive subtype with a median survival of 12-15 months1,2. Invasion of diffuse astrocytomas, particularly GBM, precludes complete surgical resection, limits the effectiveness of adjuvant therapies, and inevitably leads to post-treatment recurrence3. Patients initially present either with de novo (primary) GBM or with lower grade astrocytomas that inevitably progresses to (secondary) GBM4. GBM is genomically heterogeneous and characterized by mutually exclusive and co-occurring mutations in genes that govern three core signaling pathways: the G1/S (Rb) cell cycle checkpoint, receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK), and TP53 pathways5-7. GBM consists of four genomic subtypes with distinct expression profiles that resemble different brain cell types, suggesting that GBM subtype is influenced by its cell of origin6,8,9. Better astrocytoma models are required to define the role of specific combinations of mutations in particular cell types during astrocytoma pathogenesis. Leveraging these models for more efficient preclinical drug development will ultimately help improve patient outcomes. Current astrocytoma models include established human cell lines, patient derived xenografts (PDX), genetically modified normal human astrocytes and neural stem cells (NSC), and genetically engineered mice (GEM)10-14. We developed an alternative, non-germline GEM (nGEM) model15 utilizing primary brain cells – cortical astrocytes and NSC – harvested from GEM harboring various combinations of floxed oncogenic alleles. The goal was to generate astrocytoma models with genetically defined cells that could be phenotypically characterized both in vitro and in vivo and potentially utilized for preclinical drug development in immune-competent mice.
Established human cell lines are the most commonly used model of astrocytoma pathogenesis and drug response in vitro and in vivo. They are technically straight forward, widely available, and have defined kinetics and tumorigenicity upon orthotopic xenografting in immunodeficient mice10,11,16-18. Their disadvantages include the inability to generate established cell lines from low-grade astrocytomas, limiting study only to high-grade astrocytomas; lack of a defined cell of origin; the presence of complex genomic abnormalities, often with genomic profiles that differ markedly from the original patient sample; and susceptibility to phenotypic and genotypic drift during serial culture in serum11,17,19-22. The phenotypic consequences of individual oncogenic mutations in established human GBM cell lines can be masked by the multitude of abnormalities that are actually present, which often precludes elucidation of direct genotype-phenotype consequences.
PDX are generated through subcutaneous passage of patient-isolated astrocytoma cells in immunodeficient mice or through their culture as non-adherent spheroids in defined, serum-free medium prior to orthotopic injection into the brains of immunodeficient mice12,23. PDX more accurately maintain the genomic landscape of human astrocytomas, but similar to established human cell lines, the phenotypic effect of individual oncogenic mutations can be masked due to their genomic complexity19,24. To define the phenotypic consequences of specific oncogenic mutations, particularly in response to novel therapies, panels of established human cell lines or PDX are frequently utilized to establish genotype-phenotype correlations, show generalizability, and minimize the likelihood of cell line-specific effects. While PDX accurately recapitulate the histopathological hallmarks of human astrocytomas, including invasion, orthotopic xenografts of established human cell lines generally do not21,23,25. Additionally, normal human astrocytes and NSC have been genetically-engineered with defined oncogenic mutations to model astrocytoma tumorigenesis in vitro and in vivo13,14,26. These cells lack the genomic complexity of established human cell lines and PDX and accurately recapitulate human astrocytoma histopathology, but require xenografting in immunodeficient rodents in vivo. Because all human cell models require immunodeficient rodent hosts to prevent immune-mediated xenograft rejection, these models fail to recapitulate the native tumor-stroma interactions of a syngeneic system and lack an intact immune system, limiting preclinical investigation of stroma-targeted and immune-modulatory therapies10,11.
GEM permit examination of the phenotypic consequences of predetermined combinations of oncogenic mutations in vivo during in situ tumorigenesis. Whereas non-conditional GEM have mutations within all tissues throughout development, conditional GEM have floxed oncogenic alleles that enable targeting of mutations by restricting Cre-mediated recombination to specific cell types through use of cell type-specific promoters10,11,15,18. Conditional astrocytoma GEM have been utilized to elucidate the functional roles of oncogenic mutations in distinct cell types within an intact brain11. The preclinical utility of in situ gliomagenesis using conditional GEM is limited by a number of factors including 1) the lack of an in vitro correlate, 2) difficulty in generating large cohorts of mice with complex genotypes, 3) long latency of in situ tumor development, 4) and stochastic tumor progression. Because in situ tumorigenesis lacks a corresponding in vitro model, drug testing in vitro cannot be performed with conventional conditional GEM models. In contrast to other cancers, conditional GEM models of astrocytomas are rarely induced by single oncogenic mutations11. Thus, complex breeding schemes are required to generate conditional GEM with multiple oncogenic mutations. Moreover, astrocytoma initiation occurs with variable penetrance after a long latency period in these models, while progression to high-grade astrocytomas generally occurs in a non-uniform, stochastic manner and ultimately gives rise to tumors with complex genomic landscapes and rapid growth kinetics27,28. The variable penetrance and stochastic nature of malignant progression in conditional GEM models requires that individual mice be screened by radiographic imaging to detect the presence and location of high-grade astrocytomas before their enrollment in preclinical drug trials. Taken together, these limitations hinder the generation and testing of the large cohorts of conditional GEM required for preclinical drug testing.
The RCAS-tva GEM system, which utilizes avian retroviral (RCAS) vectors to infect GEM engineered to express the viral receptor (tva) on specific neural cell types, has been extensively utilized to model astrocytoma tumorigenesis11. In contrast to conditional GEM, this model system enables introduction of multiple oncogenic mutations in specific cells types without the requirement for complex breeding schemes. However, it is limited by variable penetrance, the requirement for actively dividing cells to achieve viral integration, and the random insertion of transgenes into the host genome29.
Non-germline GEM (nGEM) models, which utilize cells harvested from GEM, are becoming increasingly important because they overcome many of the limitations of other model systems15. The role of initiating cell type and co-occurring mutations in astrocytoma pathogenesis are difficult to determine using established human GBM cell lines or PDX because they are derived from end-stage tumors that have accumulated extensive genetic mutations in undefined cell types during the course of malignant progression. In contrast, all grades of astrocytomas can be modeled using nGEM by inducing defined genetic mutations within specific purified brain cell types11,30. Thus, the influence of specific genetic mutations and cell type on cellular and molecular phenotypes can be determined in vitro and in vivo. Similar to established human GBM cell lines, initial in vitro drug testing using nGEM can be used to prioritize drugs for in vivo testing utilizing the same cells. Tumorigenesis in vivo can then be determined by allografting nGEM cells orthotopically into the brains of immune-competent syngeneic littermates30. These orthotopic allograft models therefore permit in vivo testing not only of conventional cytotoxic and targeted therapies, but immune-modulatory and stroma-targeted therapies as well. Finally, the role of the microenvironment on tumor initiation and progression can be determined by comparing results between nGEM and conventional GEM models using the same mutations in the same cell types.
We and others have developed astrocytoma nGEM using primary cells – astrocytes, NSC, or oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPC) – harvested from GEM30-34. The rationale behind the development of an astrocytoma nGEM was to create a model to determine the phenotypic consequences of oncogenic mutations in specific cell types that could potentially be used for preclinical drug testing in vitro and in vivo in immune-competent animals. We harvested phenotypically WT cortical astrocytes and NSC from non-Cre expressing, conditional GEM maintained on a >94% C57/Bl6 background with floxed RB pathway – Rb1loxP/loxP, or TgGZT121 – and floxed RTK/RAS/PI3K pathway – Nf1loxP/loxP, KrasG12D, PtenloxP/loxP – genes in various combinations35-39. We induced genetic recombination in vitro using adenoviral vectors encoding Cre recombinase. Because cortical astrocyte harvests contain a mixture of cell types, we used Ad5GFAPCre vectors or dominant oncogenic transgenes, such as TgGZT121 driven from the human GFAP promoter, to enrich for GFAP+ cortical astrocytes in these cultures. We defined the phenotypic consequences of G1/S (Rb), MAPK, and PI3K pathway mutations in cortical astrocytes and NSC in vitro and in vivo. MAPK and PI3K pathway-activated G1/S-defective astrocytes molecularly mimicked human proneural GBM and, upon orthotopic injection, formed tumors in a pre-defined location with uniform growth kinetics, short latencies, and the histopathological hallmarks of human GBM30. Longitudinal monitoring of tumor growth in vivo aids preclinical drug testing through normalization of treatment cohorts and quantitative analysis of tumor growth in response to treatment40. We determined tumor growth kinetics by longitudinal bioluminescence imaging of mice injected with luciferase expressing cortical astrocytes. Therefore, cortical astrocytes and NSC derived from conditional GEM provide a tractable model system for definition of functional consequences of astrocytoma-associated mutations and a potential model system for preclinical drug development.
All animal studies were approved by the University of North Carolina Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
1. Culturing Cortical Astrocytes from Neonatal Mice
2. Culturing Neural Stem Cells from Neonatal Mice
3. Orthotopic Injection of Recombined Cells into the Brain of Recipient Iimmunocompetent Mice
We developed an nGEM model system with cortical astrocytes and NSC harvested from neonatal GEM harboring floxed conditional oncogenic alleles that can be phenotypically characterized in vitro and in vivo (Figure 1). In order to investigate the consequences of oncogenic mutations specifically in cortical astrocytes in vitro, it is critical to first enrich for astrocytes. Cortical astrocyte harvests contain a mixture of microglia, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, OPC, and neurons, but mechanical and genetic methods can aid in astrocyte enrichment. Whereas neurons die under normal culture conditions, microglia and oligodendrocytes can be removed by shaking overnight41,43. Additionally, genetic recombination of floxed, oncogenic alleles targeted to GFAP+ astrocytes using an Ad5GFAPCre can enrich for astrocytes. We used this method to infect cortical harvests from Rb1loxP/loxP GEM pups with floxed Nf1loxP/loxP and/or PtenloxP/loxP alleles. Ad5GFAPCre infection caused a proliferative advantage in the recombined GFAP+ astrocytes, which increased astrocyte purity from 59% to > 90% after 5 – 9 passages in culture (Figures 2A and 2B). Alternatively, we enriched for astrocytes by expressing T121 under control of the GFAP promoter to induce a proliferative advantage in astrocytes harvested from TgGZT121 mice (Figure 2C). While cortical astrocytes grow adherent to the culture dish (Figure 2C), NSC grow as non-adherent neurospheres in vitro (Figure 3A). Both WT NSC and NSC with recombined, floxed oncogenic alleles – TgGZT121 (T), KrasG12D (R), and homozygous Pten deletion (P-/-), referred to as TRP-/- – express the NSC marker Sox2, while only NSC harvested from GEM containing TgGZT121 express T121 after Cre-mediated recombination (Figure 3B).
To determine how G1/S (Rb), MAPK and/or PI3K pathway alterations affect growth of GFAP+ astrocytes in vitro, proliferation was examined using two methods. MTS and cell counting showed that expression of T121 and KrasG12D increased the proliferation of cortical astrocytes (Figures 4A and 4B). Similarly, homozygous Rb1 (Rb) and Nf1 (N), deletion combined with heterozygous Pten (P+/-) deletion also increased cortical astrocyte proliferation (Figure 4C). Transformed cells have unlimited proliferative capacity. The transforming effects of mutations can be measured in vitro using colony formation assays. We therefore tested the transforming effects of T121 and KrasG12D expression and homozygous Pten deletion in TRP-/- cortical astrocytes by colony formation assay as previously described44. Whereas WT astrocytes did not form colonies, T astrocytes formed colonies at 1.03% efficiency. Notably, TRP-/- astrocytes had the highest colony formation efficiency at 6.40% (Table 1). In order to be suitable for preclinical drug testing, it is important that in vitro tumor models be easily manipulated genetically. Additional genetic alterations can be stably introduced into cortical astrocytes by plasmid or viral vectors. As an example, we stably transduced the luciferase gene into TRP-/- astrocytes (TRP-/- luc) using a VSV-pseudotyped pMSCV retroviral vector. Expression of luciferase increased luminescence ~1,000 fold compared to parental cells (Figure 4D). Additionally, GEM-derived cortical astrocytes can be used to determine the efficacy of targeted inhibitors in vitro. We have shown previously that treatment with low dose PI-103, a dual mTOR/PI3K inhibitor, inhibited PI3K signaling without affecting cell viability30. However, the cytostatic/cytotoxic effects of higher PI-103 doses were not determined. Thus, we tested whether PI-103 can reduce TRP-/- astrocyte growth in vitro. PI-103 caused a maximal 88% reduction in TRP-/- astrocyte growth (Figure 4E). We have previously utilized orthotopic allografts of TRP-/- astrocytes to test other clinically relevant therapeutics in vivo (Schmid et al., manuscript submitted)45,46. These data suggest that transformed cortical astrocytes harvested from conditional GEM may provide a flexible model system in which to perform preclinical drug testing in immune competent mice.
Xenografts of established human cell lines and PDX require immunodeficient hosts. In contrast to PDX, many established human GBM cell lines do not recapitulate the histopathological features of GBM. For example, U87MG orthotopic xenografts formed circumscribed tumors that did not invade normal brain (Figure 5A). In contrast, injection of TRP-/- astrocytes into the brains of immune competent, syngeneic mice yielded invasive tumors that recapitulated the histological features of their human counterparts, particularly invasion of normal brain (Figure 5B). To longitudinally quantify TRP-/- allograft growth, mice were sacrificed every 5 days after cell injection and tumor burden was determined by quantifying tumor area on H&E-stained brain sections. Tumor area increased exponentially over time (Figure 5C). Orthotopic injection of 105 TRP-/- astrocytes into recipient brains led to neurological morbidity, with a median survival of 22 days (Figure 5D). In addition to cortical astrocytes, we performed orthotopic injections using TRP-/- NSC. TRP-/- NSC-derived tumors were T121 positive, proliferative, and maintained expression of the NSC marker Sox2 (Figure 6). Of note, injection of cortical astrocytes and NSC harvested from WT C57Bl/6 mice as well as phenotypically WT cortical astrocytes or NSC with unrecombined, floxed oncogenic alleles from conditional GEM failed to elicit tumorigenesis during this time frame (data not shown). Longitudinal imaging in vivo has been used to monitor tumor growth kinetics in response to drug treatments40. Thus, TRP-/- luc astrocytes were injected into the brains of immune competent syngeneic littermates and tumor growth was determined by serial bioluminescence imaging. Bioluminescence increased 15 fold over 16 days (Figures 7A and 7B). We have demonstrated that cortical astrocytes and NSC harvested from conditional GEM can be genetically modified and phenotypically characterized in vitro and in vivo for definition of the genetics and cell biology of astrocytoma pathogenesis and potentially used for preclinical drug development.
Figure 1. Schematic of cortical astrocyte and NSC harvest from nGEM. Phenotypically WT cortical astrocytes and NSC were harvested from GEM with conditional oncogenic alleles. Genetic recombination was induced in vitro with an AdCre vector. Transformed cells were phenotypically characterized in vitro by various methods and in vivo by orthotopic injection into the brains of immune-competent, syngeneic littermates.
Figure 2. Enrichment of GFAP+ astrocytes upon serial passaging in vitro. Representative immunofluorescence images showing GFAP+ astrocytes harvested from Rb1loxP/loxP GEM pups with Nf1loxP/loxP and/or PtenloxP/loxP in which genetic recombination was induced with Ad5GFAPCre and the cells passaged X times (PX) (A). Quantification of enrichment of GFAP+ astrocytes in panel A. Bars represent standard error from 3-24 replicates (B). Representative immunofluorescence (top) and phase contrast (bottom) images of adherent cortical astrocytes harvested from TgGZT121 GEM pups that express T121 from the GFAP promoter at passage 9 after recombination with Ad5CMVCre in vitro (C). Astrocytes were quantified as the number of GFAP+ (green) cells divided by the total number of DAPI-stained nuclei (blue) at every other passage. Images were taken at 10X original magnification (A,C). Scale bars represent 100 µm (A,C). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. WT and recombined NSC harvested from TRP-/- GEM. Representative phase contrast images of phenotypically WT (top) and TRP-/- (bottom) NSC grown as neurospheres in vitro (A). Representative immunofluorescence staining for T121 (green) and Sox2 (red) expression in WT (top) and TRP-/- (bottom) neurospheres (B). Scale bars represent 100 µm (A,B). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Characterization of cortical astrocytes in vitro. Growth of WT and TR cortical astrocytes was determined by counting cells on days 1-7 (A). Relative optical density (O.D.) of WT and TR cortical astrocytes was determined by MTS (B). Relative growth of WT and recombined Rb1-/-;Nf1-/-;Pten+/- (RbNP+/-) astrocytes was determined by MTS (C). Luminescence of parental TRP-/- and luciferase expressing TRP-/- astrocytes (TRP-/- luc) (D). Relative O.D. of TRP-/- astrocytes treated with PI103 for 5 days as determined by MTS (E). Proliferation and dose response was calculated using the exponential growth equation in GraphPad Prism 5. Bars represent standard error from 6 replicates per condition. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5. In vivo gliomagenesis. Representative H&E stained section of a U87MG xenograft shows discrete tumor margins (A). Representative H&E stained section of a TRP-/- allograft shows diffuse invasion of normal brain (B). Scale bars in left and right H&E images represent 1 mm and 100 µm, respectively. Tumor area was determined by analyzing H&E stained sections of formalin fixed, paraffin embedded brains from immune-competent, syngeneic littermates injected with 105 TRP-/- astrocytes and sacrificed at 5 day intervals post-injection. (C). Kaplan–Meier survival analysis of TRP-/- allograft mice aged to morbidity shows a median survival of 22 days (D).
Figure 6. Immunofluorescence of TRP+/- NSC allografts. Representative immunofluorescence images show that TRP+/- NSC injected into the brains of immune-competent, syngeneic littermates express T121 (green) and Sox2 (white) and proliferate, as determined by EdU (red) incorporation. Mice were perfused with EdU and sacrificed 6 weeks post-injection and their brains perfused with paraformaldehyde. Scale bar represents 20 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7. Longitudinal imaging of TRP-/- luc allografts. Representative bioluminescence images (A) and quantification of luciferase flux over time (B) shows growth of TRP-/- allografts in immune-competent, syngeneic mice injected with 105 TRP-/- luc cortical astrocytes and imaged at the indicated days post-injection. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Genotype | Plating efficiency (%) | SEM |
WT | 0 | 0 |
T | 1.03 | 0.15 |
TRP-/- | 6.40 | 0.83 |
Table 1. Colony formation of cortical astrocytes. WT, T and TRP-/- cortical astrocytes were plated in triplicate at 4,000, 2,000, and 250 cells/well respectively. Colonies were stained with crystal violet 14 days after plating, imaged, and counted using ImageJ. Plating efficiency was calculated as the number of colonies divided by the number of cells plated.
The most critical steps to ensure proper harvest and culture of cortical astrocytes are 1) to excise the cortex without taking tissue below the corpus callosum, 2) to remove the meninges, 3) to thoroughly dissociate the cells, and 4) to enrich for GFAP+ astrocytes. Although we used mechanical (shaking) and genetic (restriction of genetic recombination with an Ad5GFAPCre vector or utilization of a dominant transforming transgene (TgGZT121) under GFAP promoter control) methods to enrich for GFAP+ astrocytes, other techniques have been utilized to purify cortical astrocytes. For example, contaminating microglia can be removed by treating confluent cultures with a mitotic inhibitor followed by l-leucine methyl ester47. The morphology and expression profiles of astrocytes mechanically purified and cultured in serum-containing media differ from acutely isolated astrocytes, with the former hypothesized to represent either more immature astrocytic cells or a reactive astrocyte phenotype48,49. More recently, an immunopanning method has been developed to prospectively purify cortical rodent astrocytes and their expression profiles more closely mimicked acutely purified astrocytes when cultured in growth factor-supplemented, serum-free media49. The impact of the conventional, mechanical method of cortical astrocyte enrichment and culture versus the more recently developed immunopanning method on the phenotypes investigated herein remain unclear. Regardless of the method utilized, it is essential to enrich for GFAP+ cortical astrocytes to determine the phenotypic consequences of oncogenic mutations specifically within this cell type.
Critical steps for harvesting NSC are 1) to accurately locate the SVZ, 2) to minimize damage to the SVZ during dissection, and 3) to filter the cells following dissociation before plating. Precise NSC dissection technique is necessary to locate and harvest the SVZ. Because NSC grow in suspension culture, it is essential to filter the cell suspension after dissociation to reduce the amount of floating debris. Although we utilized growth in SCM to select for NSC, NSC can be prospectively isolated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting of the SVZ tissue homogenate50. After induction of genetic recombination in vitro, it is important to monitor the cellular characteristics of the cortical astrocyte and NSC cultures across passages. Because we did not prospectively enrich for astrocytes or NSC during tissue harvest, we serially monitored enrichment and quantified purity of the cell type of interest by immunofluorescence staining with known cell-type specific markers (GFAP for astrocytes, Sox2 for NSC). Additionally, we recommend systematically monitoring the expected signaling consequences of oncogenic mutations both before and at each passage after Cre-mediated recombination by immunoblotting and phenotypically characterizing cells at the earliest passage at which purity is maximized and mutation induced signaling alterations stabilize.
An important consideration in utilizing primary cell cultures is their inherent replicative capacity and the phenotypic impact of the induced mutations. Phenotypically WT murine astrocytes have limited replicative capacity and can only be passaged 3 – 4 times in culture before they undergo replicative senescence31. Moreover, many cancer associated mutations, particularly in MAPK pathway genes, cause oncogene-induced senescence in vitro51. Thus, if the induced mutations fail to immortalize cells and protect them from oncogene-induced senescence, they cannot be serially passaged for phenotypic characterization in vitro. Viral oncoproteins such as HPV E6/E7 and SV40 large T antigen have been extensively utilized to immortalize many human and murine cell types in culture, including astrocytes13,26,30. We have previously shown that ablation of the G1/S cell cycle checkpoint with T was sufficient to immortalize cortical astrocytes, but not sufficient to cause lethal astrocytomas in vivo. In contrast, activation of MAPK and PI3K signaling in TRP-/- astrocytes led to formation of GBM in the orthotopic allograft model system30. Thus, the effects of T, R, and P mutations on murine astrocyte transformation in vitro as defined by colony formation assays correlated with in vivo tumorigenesis in orthotopic allografts.
Like all models that require surgical implantation of tumor cells, orthotopic injection of transformed, nGEM cells into syngeneic mouse brains will elicit an acute wound response, termed reactive gliosis. During this response, neural cells, including astrocytes, oligodendrocyte progenitor (NG2+) glia, and microglia, proliferate and acquire a more primitive differentiation state, largely in response to secreted proteins such as sonic hedgehog52,53. However, the proliferative phase of reactive gliosis in response to stab wounding is relatively short, typically one week53. We have previously shown that injection of TRP-/- astrocytes efficiently induces tumorigenesis during this time frame, yielding low-grade astrocytomas that frequently progress to high-grade astrocytomas, including GBM. In contrast, injection of T or TP-/- astrocytes infrequently develop into low-grade astrocytomas at 1-3 weeks post-injection and these tumors fail to progress to high-grade astrocytomas30. Moreover, injection of phenotypically wild-type cortical astrocytes and NSC alone fails to elicit tumorigenesis (data not shown). We found that TRP-/- allograft growth exponentially increases 2-3 week post-injection, a time frame during which the proliferative phase of reactive gliosis has ended (Figures 5 and 7). To account for potential microenvironmental influences on tumorigenesis upon injection of transformed, nGEM cells into syngeneic mouse brains, particularly during the proliferative phase of reactive gliosis, we recommend performing control injections of phenotypically WT cortical astrocytes or NSC when investigating novel combinations of unrecombined, floxed oncogenic alleles. We also recommend monitoring the efficiency of tumorigenesis of both phenotypically WT and transformed (recombined) cells at weekly intervals during the first month post-injection, as we have previously described30.
Through genetic manipulation of either the injected cells or the allograft host itself, the nGEM astrocytoma model system can be used to model many aspects of astrocytoma pathogenesis, including tumor-stroma interactions. As an example, we engineered TRP-/- cortical astrocytes to express luciferase to define tumor growth kinetics in vivo (Figure 7). Alternatively, nGEM cells could be genetically modified to express a fluorescent protein and orthotopically injected into the brains of GEM with fluorescently labeled neurons or vasculature to define the interactions between tumor cells and normal brain cells54. The microenvironmental influence of brain region or developmental age on gliomagenesis can be determined by orthotopically injecting nGEM cells in different locations or in different aged mice. Although short tumor latencies and survival is beneficial for preclinical drug testing, rapid tumor development may not be ideal to model some aspects of astrocytoma pathogenesis, including malignant progression, invasion, and tumor-stoma interactions. Survival of nGEM allograft hosts can be readily manipulated by altering the number of cells injected and systematically monitoring tumor penetrance and latency30.
Human astrocytomas are genomically complex and exhibit extensive intra and inter-tumor heterogeneity5-7,55,56. Potential sources of this heterogeneity include the somatic mutations that initiate tumorigenesis, the mutations acquired during the evolutionary process of malignant progression, and the developmental potential of the cells in which these mutations occur. Large scale sequencing projects have identified many astrocytoma-associated mutations and their patterns of co-occurrence7. These studies have relied upon bioinformatic algorithms to identify frequently occurring mutations and to nominate mutations that are likely oncogenic, i.e. “driver mutations” that initiate tumorigenesis or drive malignant progression. However, the oncogenic potential of many of these mutations, and their potential cell type specificity, has not been systematically investigated in model systems. We propose that nGEM models utilizing cortical astrocytes and NSC as described here, as well as other neural cell types that can be purified and grown in culture, provide a versatile system to perform such investigations. The sufficiency and necessity for transformation of novel candidate mutations identified through large scale sequencing projects can then be systematically investigated using conventional genetic gain- and loss-of-function approaches with specific nGEM cell types harboring common co-occurring mutations in core GBM pathways for which conditional GEM exist5. We further propose that panels of nGEM harboring diverse combinations of mutations in multiple neural cell types will be useful in modeling the genomic heterogeneity of human astrocytomas. Additionally, nGEM astrocytoma models with cortical astrocytes and NSC derived from conditional GEM may provide a tractable model for preclinical drug development because initial in vitro testing of both mono- and combination therapies can be performed in these cells to direct more efficient in vivo drug testing in immune competent, syngeneic mice. Moreover, immune modulating and stroma-targeted therapies can be tested in nGEM astrocytoma models with immune competent, syngeneic allograft hosts. Thus, nGEM astrocytoma models with transformed cortical astrocytes and NSC are a valuable model system to determine the functional consequences of combinations of oncogenic mutations in specific cell types and may be useful in preclinical drug testing.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
CRM is a Damon Runyon-Genentech Clinical Investigator. This work was supported, in part, by grants to CRM from the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation (CI-45-09), Department of Defense (W81XWH-09-2-0042), and University of North Carolina University Cancer Research Fund (UCRF). The authors wish to thank Daniel Roth for mouse husbandry assistance. The authors also wish to thank Hannah Chae, Carter McCormick, Demi Canoutas, Stephanie Gillette, and Susannah Krom for tissue culture and immunofluorescence assistance.
Name of Material/ Equipment | Company | Catalog Number | Comments/Description |
Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM) (1X) | Invitrogen | 11995065 | DMEM can also be purchased from other suppliers including GIBCOSigma and Cellgro |
Fetal Bovine Serum, Regular | Cellgro | 35-010-CV | |
Penicillin-Streptomycin | Invitrogen | 15140122 | |
Sharp-Pointed Dissecting Scissors | Fisher Scientific | 08-395 | |
Cartilage Thumb Forceps, Curved | Fisher Scientific | 1631 | |
Miltex 17-301 Style 1 Jeweler Style Forceps, Fine, 4 | Miltex | 17-301 | |
Ethanol (200 proof) | Decon Labs | 2710 | |
Razor Blades | VWR | 55411-050 | |
Hanks' Balanced Salt Solution (HBSS) (1X), liquid | Invitrogen | 14175-095 | |
TrypLE Express (1X), Phenol Red | Invitrogen | 12605-010 | Other Trypsin solutions are also suitable for cortical astrocyte havest and culture |
CULTURE DISH, 60 x 15 mm | Thomas Scientific | 9380H77 | |
15 ml tubes | BD Biosciences | 352096 | |
50 ml tubes | BD Biosciences | 352070 | |
Adenovirus stock | Gene Transfer Vector Core, U. Iowa | Ad5CMVCre | Store in 5 µl aliquots at -80 C. Hazardous. Use Bsl2 safetyy precautions |
Sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) | Sigma-Aldrich | 238597 | |
Potassium sulfate (K2SO4) | Sigma-Aldrich | 221325 | |
Magnesium chloride (MgCl2) | Sigma-Aldrich | M8266 | |
Calcium chloride (CaCl2) | Sigma-Aldrich | 746495 | |
HEPES potassium salt | Sigma-Aldrich | H0527 | |
D-(+)- Glucose | Sigma-Aldrich | G8270 | |
Phenol Red | Sigma-Aldrich | P3532 | |
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) | Sigma-Aldrich | S5881 | |
Papain | Worthington | LS003127 | |
L-Cysteine-HCl | Sigma-Aldrich | C1276 | |
Syringe filter (0.22 µm pore size) | Millipore | SLGP033NS | |
Neurocult proliferation kit, mouse | Stemcell Technologies | 5702 | This kit contains the NeuroCult NSC Basal Medium and NeuroCult NSC supplement needed for NSC culture |
0.2% Heparin solution | Stemcell Technologies | 7980 | |
EGF | Invitrogen | PMG8041 | |
bFGF | Invitrogen | PHG0261 | |
Hanks' Balanced Salt Solution (HBSS) (10X) | Invitrogen | 14185-052 | |
Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) | Sigma-Aldrich | M7506 | |
Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) | Sigma-Aldrich | S5761 | |
E-64 | Sigma-Aldrich | E3132 | Make 10 mM stock in DMSO, store at -20 °C |
6-well plates | Fisher Scientific | 07-200-83 | |
Cell strainer (40 µm pore size) | Corning | 352340 | |
Stem cell dissociation solution | Stemcell Technologies | 5707 | Alternatively, use gentle enzyme solutions such as Accutase |
Methyl cellulose 15 cP | Sigma-Aldrich | M7027 | |
Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Media 2X | Millipore | SLM-202-B | For making 5% methyl cellulose solution |
1.7mL Snap Cap Microcentrifuge Tube | Corning | 3620 | |
Hamilton syringe, 250 µl LT no needle | Fisher Scientific | 14-815-92 | |
PB600-1 Antigen Dispenser | Hamilton | 83700 | |
Disposable 18 ga needles | Fisher Scientific | NC9015638 | |
27 ga 1/2" luer tip needle | Fisher Scientific | 14-826-48 | |
2,2,2-Tribromoethanol (Avertin) | Sigma-Aldrich | T48402 | |
Betadine | Fisher Scientific | NC9386574 | |
Puralube Opthalmic Ointment | Fisher Scientific | NC9689910 | |
Model 900 Stereotaxic frame | Kopf Instruments | ||
VETBOND | Fisher Scientific | NC9259532 | Tissue adhesive |
Lidocaine | ShopMedVet | RXLIDO-EPI | |
CellTiter 96 AQueous One Solution Cell Proliferation Assay (MTS) | Promega | G3580 | |
Anti-Sox2 | Millipore | AB5603 | |
Polyclonal Rabbit Anti-Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein (GFAP) | Dako | Z0334 | |
IVIS Kinetic | PerkinElmer | For in vivo imaging | |
D-Luciferin – K+ Salt Bioluminescent Substrate | PerkinElmer | 122796 | For in vivo bioluminescence imaging |
EdU Imaging Kit | Invitrogen | C10340 | |
MSCV Luciferase PGK-hygro | Addgene | 18782 |