Stable gene expression in vitro

Nature ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 297 (5866) ◽  
pp. 457-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.R. Woodland
Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1229-1229
Author(s):  
Catherine Gutierrez ◽  
Aziz Al'Khafaji ◽  
Eric Brenner ◽  
Russell Durrett ◽  
Kaitlyn Johnson ◽  
...  

Cancer's ability to evolve and adapt is a major challenge to therapeutic success. Fueling this evolution is vast tumor heterogeneity, with constituent clones varying in their genetics, epigenetics and response to therapy. As a field, however, we have yet to couple the genetic alterations present within individual clones to their transcriptional or functional outputs. Here, we applied a novel adaptation of clone tracing that integrates DNA barcoding with single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to HG3, a CLL cell line harboring del(13q) and no other known cancer drivers, to model in vitro responses to front-line chemotherapy with fludarabine and cyclophosphamide at clone-level resolution. To generate a high-diversity barcode library compatible with scRNA-seq, a random pool of 20 base pair DNA barcodes was introduced into the 3'UTR of a reporter gene in a lentiviral expression vector. This viral barcode library was transduced into HG3 cells (at MOI 0.1 to minimize multiple barcode-tagging of cells) and 1.2x106 barcoded cells were sorted and expanded to establish the parental barcoded HG3 population. We subsequently treated this barcoded population with an LD95 combined dose of fludarabine and mafosfamide (the in vitro analog of cyclophosphamide) in 8 parallel experiments. Cell barcodes were sequenced prior to treatment (TP1) and following outgrowth from treatment (TP2) for analysis of clonal composition. 10,000 cells each from TP1 and from 2 of 8 parallel replicates at TP2 were processed for scRNA-seq. We observed a massive decrease in viability across all 8 replicates, with regrowth occurring at 20 days post-treatment. Barcode analysis revealed a marked decrease in clonal diversity from TP1 to TP2 (11,827 to 2,622 ± 380, n=8; or ~78%), and clones that survived treatment did so consistently such that 94% of surviving cells in each replicate had a clonal identity that was present in all 8 replicates. Analysis of clonally-resolved transcriptional profiles revealed that clones consistently fell into one of two stable gene expression states (clusters) prior to treatment, with nominal intermixing between populations. Treatment predominantly selected for clones comprising the smaller of these two clusters (TP1-'high tolerance'), with only a minimal number of resistant clones originating from the larger cluster at TP1 (TP1-'low tolerance'). Pathway and gene set enrichment analysis of these two TP1 clusters demonstrated that TP1-high tolerance had a stark upregulation of common CLL signaling pathways (i.e. WNT and CXCR4, an inflammatory/migratory phenotype) and a reliance on chromatin modification pathways. TP1-low tolerance, on the other hand, exhibited upregulated type 2 antigen presentation and prostaglandin biosynthesis/metabolism which has a known role in driving inflammation and migration in adjacent cells (Wang et al, BMJ 2006). These gene expression states remained stable after treatment, but with the added upregulation of well-described mechanisms of resistance to cyclophosphamide, with TP1-high tolerance exhibiting upregulation of GSTP1, a glutathione S-transferase that is a main mediator of cyclophosphamide metabolism, and TP1-low tolerance exhibiting upregulation of members of the ALDH family thought to ameliorate toxicity from chemotherapy-induced ROS (Andersson et al, Acta Oncologica 1995). Through this work, we resolved the underlying clonal composition of a CLL cell line and observed that the constituent clones exhibit stable and discrete gene expression states that differentially respond to chemotherapy. We noted two different axes of resistance - a more successful avenue that relies on WNT and CXCR4 signaling as well as cyclophosphamide clearance for resistance, and a less-successful avenue that involves clearance of reactive oxygen species for survival. The intersection of these two critical CLL pathways in in vitro resistance to first-line CLL therapy is of particular interest given the FAT1 (WNT regulator) mutations and CXCR4 upregulation frequently seen in chemo-refractory CLL (Messina et al, Blood 2014; Burger et al, Blood 2006), and future efforts will assess the stability and interplay of these two pathways in patient samples collected upon relapse to fludarabine and cyclophosphamide. Further, our approach provides a template for the high-resolution study of tens of thousands of clones and their respective phenotypes in a mixed leukemic population. Disclosures Neuberg: Pharmacyclics: Research Funding; Madrigal Pharmaceuticals: Equity Ownership; Celgene: Research Funding. Wu:Pharmacyclics: Research Funding; Neon Therapeutics: Other: Member, Advisory Board.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 703-706
Author(s):  
F Toneguzzo ◽  
A C Hayday ◽  
A Keating

The technique of DNA transfer by electroporation was investigated in an effort to evaluate its utility for the identification of developmentally controlled regulatory sequences. Transient and stable gene expression was detected in a variety of lymphoid cell lines subjected to electroporation. No correlation existed between the levels of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (acetyl-CoA; chloramphenicol 3-O-acetyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.28) expression and stable transfection frequency. In all lymphoid cell lines tested, the simian virus 40 early region was a better promoter than was the Rous sarcoma virus long terminal repeat.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (11) ◽  
pp. 1737-1747 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Yu ◽  
Geoffrey Neale ◽  
Hui Zhang ◽  
Han M. Lee ◽  
Zhijun Ma ◽  
...  

Key Points HOXB4 induces stable gene expression changes in transplanted HSCs that drive balanced self-renewal and differentiation divisions. Marked downregulation of Prdm16 occurs concurrently with HOXB4-mediated HSC expansion and functions to prevent leukemia in vivo.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 5539-5539
Author(s):  
Xianzheng Zhou ◽  
Xin Huang ◽  
Andrew C. Wilber ◽  
Lei Bao ◽  
Dong Tuong ◽  
...  

Abstract The Sleeping Beauty (SB) transposon system is a non-viral DNA delivery system in which a transposase directs integration of an SB transposon into TA-dinucleotide sites in the genome. To determine whether the SB transposon system can mediate integration and long-term transgene expression in human primary T-cells, freshly isolated peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) without prior activation were nucleofected with SB vectors carrying a DsRed reporter gene. Plasmids containing the SB transposase on the same (cis) (n=10) or separate molecule (trans) (n=8) as the SB transposon mediated long-term and stable reporter gene expression in human primary T-cells. We observed that delivery of SB transposase-encoding plasmid in trans effectively mediated stable gene expression in primary T-cells, exhibiting about a 3-fold increase (11% vs. 3% with 10 microgram plasmid on day 21) in potency in comparison with the cis vector (p<0.0001). In addition, a transposase mutant construct was incapable of mediating stable gene expression in human PBLs (n=6, p<0.0001), confirming that catalytic DDE domain is necessary for transposition in human primary T-cells. Immunophenotyping analysis in transposed T-cells showed that both CD4 and CD8 T-cells were transgene positive. SB-mediated high level of transgene expression in human T-cells was maintained in culture for at least 4 months without losing observable expression. Southern hybridization analysis showed a variety of transposon integrants among the 6 DsRed positive T-cell clones and no transposon sequences identifiable in the 2 DsRed negative clones. Sequencing of transposon:chromosome junctions in 5 out of 6 transposed T-cell clones confirmed that stable gene expression was due to SB-mediated transposition. In other studies, PBLs were successfully transfected using the SB transposon system and shown to stably and functionally express a fusion protein consisting of a surface receptor useful for positive T-cell selection and a “suicide” gene useful for elimination of transfected T-cells after chemotherapy. This study is the first report demonstrating that the SB transposon system can mediate stable gene transfer in human primary PBLs, which may be more advantageous for T-cell based gene therapies over widely used virus-based or conventional mammalian DNA vectors in terms of simplicity, stability, efficiency and safety.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ena Kolundzic ◽  
Andreas Ofenbauer ◽  
Bora Uyar ◽  
Anne Sommermeier ◽  
Stefanie Seelk ◽  
...  

The chromatin regulator FACT (Facilitates Chromatin Transcription) is essential for ensuring stable gene expression by promoting transcription. In a genetic screen usingC. eleganswe identified that FACT maintains cell identities and acts as a barrier for transcription factor-mediated cell fate reprogramming. Strikingly, FACTs role as a reprogramming barrier is conserved in humans as we show that FACT depletion enhances reprogramming of fibroblasts into stem cells and neurons. Such activity of FACT is unexpected since known reprogramming barriers typically repress gene expression by silencing chromatin. In contrast, FACT is a positive regulator of gene expression suggesting an unprecedented link of cell fate maintenance with counteracting alternative cell identities. This notion is supported by ATAC-seq analysis showing that FACT depletion results in decreased but also increased chromatin accessibility for transcription factors. Our findings identify FACT as a cellular reprogramming barrier inC. elegansand in Human, revealing an evolutionarily conserved mechanism for cell fate protection.


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hee W Seo ◽  
Tae M Kim ◽  
Jin W Choi ◽  
Beom K Han ◽  
Gwonhwa Song ◽  
...  

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