Implementation of a prostate cancer-specific targeted sequencing panel for credentialing of patient-derived cell lines and genomic characterization of patient samples.

TitleImplementation of a prostate cancer-specific targeted sequencing panel for credentialing of patient-derived cell lines and genomic characterization of patient samples.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsStover EH, Oh C, Keskula P, Choudhury AD, Tseng Y-Y, Adalsteinsson VA, Lohr JG, Thorner AR, Ducar M, Kryukov GV, Ha G, Rosenberg M, Freeman SS, Zhang Z, Wu X, Van Allen EM, Takeda DY, Loda M, Wu C-L, Taplin M-E, Garraway LA, Boehm JS, Huang FW
JournalProstate
Volume82
Issue5
Pagination584-597
Date Published2022 Apr
ISSN1097-0045
KeywordsCell Line, Cell-Free Nucleic Acids, Credentialing, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Male, Mutation, Prostatic Neoplasms
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Primary and metastatic prostate cancers have low mutation rates and recurrent alterations in a small set of genes, enabling targeted sequencing of prostate cancer-associated genes as an efficient approach to characterizing patient samples (compared to whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing). For example, targeted sequencing provides a flexible, rapid, and cost-effective method for genomic assessment of patient-derived cell lines to evaluate fidelity to initial patient tumor samples.

METHODS: We developed a prostate cancer-specific targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel to detect alterations in 62 prostate cancer-associated genes as well as recurring gene fusions with ETS family members, representing the majority of common alterations in prostate cancer. We tested this panel on primary prostate cancer tissues and blood biopsies from patients with metastatic prostate cancer. We generated patient-derived cell lines from primary prostate cancers using conditional reprogramming methods and applied targeted sequencing to evaluate the fidelity of these cell lines to the original patient tumors.

RESULTS: The prostate cancer-specific panel identified biologically and clinically relevant alterations, including point mutations in driver oncogenes and ETS family fusion genes, in tumor tissues from 29 radical prostatectomy samples. The targeted panel also identified genomic alterations in cell-free DNA and circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from patients with metastatic prostate cancer, and in standard prostate cancer cell lines. We used the targeted panel to sequence our set of patient-derived cell lines; however, no prostate cancer-specific mutations were identified in the tumor-derived cell lines, suggesting preferential outgrowth of normal prostate epithelial cells.

CONCLUSIONS: We evaluated a prostate cancer-specific targeted NGS panel to detect common and clinically relevant alterations (including ETS family gene fusions) in prostate cancer. The panel detected driver mutations in a diverse set of clinical samples of prostate cancer, including fresh-frozen tumors, cell-free DNA, CTCs, and cell lines. Targeted sequencing of patient-derived cell lines highlights the challenge of deriving cell lines from primary prostate cancers and the importance of genomic characterization to credential candidate cell lines. Our study supports that a prostate cancer-specific targeted sequencing panel provides an efficient, clinically feasible approach to identify genetic alterations across a spectrum of prostate cancer samples and cell lines.

DOI10.1002/pros.24305
Alternate JournalProstate
PubMed ID35084050
PubMed Central IDPMC8887817
Grant ListR01 CA187918 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
K08 CA237871 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P01 CA120964 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
T32 HG002295 / HG / NHGRI NIH HHS / United States
R01 CA131945 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
K08 CA191026 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P50 CA211024 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
K08 CA218530 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
Related Faculty: 
Massimo Loda, M.D.

Pathology & Laboratory Medicine 1300 York Avenue New York, NY 10065 Phone: (212) 746-6464
Surgical Pathology: (212) 746-2700