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Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells

The classical sacrococcygeal chordoma tumor presents with a typical morphology of lobulated myxoid tumor tissue with cords, strands and nests of tumor cells. The population of cells consists of small non-vacuolated cells, intermediate cells with a wide range of vacuolization and large heavily vacuol...

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Autores principales: El-Heliebi, Amin, Kroneis, Thomas, Wagner, Karin, Meditz, Katharina, Kolb, Dagmar, Feichtinger, Julia, Thallinger, Gerhard G., Quehenberger, Franz, Liegl-Atzwanger, Bernadette, Rinner, Beate
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3913634/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24503940
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087663
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author El-Heliebi, Amin
Kroneis, Thomas
Wagner, Karin
Meditz, Katharina
Kolb, Dagmar
Feichtinger, Julia
Thallinger, Gerhard G.
Quehenberger, Franz
Liegl-Atzwanger, Bernadette
Rinner, Beate
author_facet El-Heliebi, Amin
Kroneis, Thomas
Wagner, Karin
Meditz, Katharina
Kolb, Dagmar
Feichtinger, Julia
Thallinger, Gerhard G.
Quehenberger, Franz
Liegl-Atzwanger, Bernadette
Rinner, Beate
author_sort El-Heliebi, Amin
collection PubMed
description The classical sacrococcygeal chordoma tumor presents with a typical morphology of lobulated myxoid tumor tissue with cords, strands and nests of tumor cells. The population of cells consists of small non-vacuolated cells, intermediate cells with a wide range of vacuolization and large heavily vacuolated (physaliferous) cells. To date analysis was only performed on bulk tumor mass because of its rare incidence, lack of suited model systems and technical limitations thereby neglecting its heterogeneous composition. We intended to clarify whether the observed cell types are derived from genetically distinct clones or represent different phenotypes. Furthermore, we aimed at elucidating the differences between small non-vacuolated and large physaliferous cells on the genomic and transcriptomic level. Phenotype-specific analyses of small non-vacuolated and large physaliferous cells in two independent chordoma cell lines yielded four candidate genes involved in chordoma cell development. UCHL3, coding for an ubiquitin hydrolase, was found to be over-expressed in the large physaliferous cell phenotype of MUG-Chor1 (18.7-fold) and U-CH1 (3.7-fold) cells. The mannosyltransferase ALG11 (695-fold) and the phosphatase subunit PPP2CB (18.6-fold) were found to be up-regulated in large physaliferous MUG-Chor1 cells showing a similar trend in U-CH1 cells. TMEM144, an orphan 10-transmembrane family receptor, yielded contradictory data as cDNA microarray analysis showed up- but RT-qPCR data down-regulation in large physaliferous MUG-Chor1 cells. Isolation of few but morphologically identical cells allowed us to overcome the limitations of bulk analysis in chordoma research. We identified the different chordoma cell phenotypes to be part of a developmental process and discovered new genes linked to chordoma cell development representing potential targets for further research in chordoma tumor biology.
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spelling pubmed-39136342014-02-06 Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells El-Heliebi, Amin Kroneis, Thomas Wagner, Karin Meditz, Katharina Kolb, Dagmar Feichtinger, Julia Thallinger, Gerhard G. Quehenberger, Franz Liegl-Atzwanger, Bernadette Rinner, Beate PLoS One Research Article The classical sacrococcygeal chordoma tumor presents with a typical morphology of lobulated myxoid tumor tissue with cords, strands and nests of tumor cells. The population of cells consists of small non-vacuolated cells, intermediate cells with a wide range of vacuolization and large heavily vacuolated (physaliferous) cells. To date analysis was only performed on bulk tumor mass because of its rare incidence, lack of suited model systems and technical limitations thereby neglecting its heterogeneous composition. We intended to clarify whether the observed cell types are derived from genetically distinct clones or represent different phenotypes. Furthermore, we aimed at elucidating the differences between small non-vacuolated and large physaliferous cells on the genomic and transcriptomic level. Phenotype-specific analyses of small non-vacuolated and large physaliferous cells in two independent chordoma cell lines yielded four candidate genes involved in chordoma cell development. UCHL3, coding for an ubiquitin hydrolase, was found to be over-expressed in the large physaliferous cell phenotype of MUG-Chor1 (18.7-fold) and U-CH1 (3.7-fold) cells. The mannosyltransferase ALG11 (695-fold) and the phosphatase subunit PPP2CB (18.6-fold) were found to be up-regulated in large physaliferous MUG-Chor1 cells showing a similar trend in U-CH1 cells. TMEM144, an orphan 10-transmembrane family receptor, yielded contradictory data as cDNA microarray analysis showed up- but RT-qPCR data down-regulation in large physaliferous MUG-Chor1 cells. Isolation of few but morphologically identical cells allowed us to overcome the limitations of bulk analysis in chordoma research. We identified the different chordoma cell phenotypes to be part of a developmental process and discovered new genes linked to chordoma cell development representing potential targets for further research in chordoma tumor biology. Public Library of Science 2014-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3913634/ /pubmed/24503940 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087663 Text en © 2014 El-Heliebi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
El-Heliebi, Amin
Kroneis, Thomas
Wagner, Karin
Meditz, Katharina
Kolb, Dagmar
Feichtinger, Julia
Thallinger, Gerhard G.
Quehenberger, Franz
Liegl-Atzwanger, Bernadette
Rinner, Beate
Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells
title Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells
title_full Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells
title_fullStr Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells
title_full_unstemmed Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells
title_short Resolving Tumor Heterogeneity: Genes Involved in Chordoma Cell Development Identified by Low-Template Analysis of Morphologically Distinct Cells
title_sort resolving tumor heterogeneity: genes involved in chordoma cell development identified by low-template analysis of morphologically distinct cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3913634/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24503940
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087663
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