Abstract

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are the potential precursors of metastatic disease. Most assays established for the enumeration of CTCs so far–including the gold standard CellSearch—rely on the expression of the cell surface marker epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM). But, these approaches may not detect CTCs that express no/low levels of EpCAM, e.g. by undergoing epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Here we present an enrichment strategy combining different antibodies specific for surface proteins and extracellular matrix (ECM) components to capture an EpCAMlow/neg cell line and EpCAMneg CTCs from blood samples of breast cancer patients depleted for EpCAM-positive cells. The expression of respective proteins (Trop2, CD49f, c-Met, CK8, CD44, ADAM8, CD146, TEM8, CD47) was verified by immunofluorescence on EpCAMpos (e.g. MCF7, SKBR3) and EpCAMlow/neg (MDA-MB-231) breast cancer cell lines. To test antibodies and ECM proteins (e.g. hyaluronic acid (HA), collagen I, laminin) for capturing EpCAMneg cells, the capture molecules were first spotted in a single- and multi-array format onto aldehyde-coated glass slides. Tumor cell adhesion of EpCAMpos/neg cell lines was then determined and visualized by Coomassie/MitoTracker staining. In consequence, marginal binding of EpCAMlow/neg MDA-MB-231 cells to EpCAM-antibodies could be observed. However, efficient adhesion/capturing of EpCAMlow/neg cells could be achieved via HA and immobilized antibodies against CD49f and Trop2. Optimal capture conditions were then applied to immunomagnetic beads to detect EpCAMneg CTCs from clinical samples. Captured CTCs were verified/quantified by immunofluorescence staining for anti-pan-Cytokeratin (CK)-FITC/anti-CD45 AF647/DAPI. In total, in 20 out of 29 EpCAM-depleted fractions (69%) from 25 metastatic breast cancer patients additional EpCAMneg CTCs could be identified [range of 1–24 CTCs per sample] applying Trop2, CD49f, c-Met, CK8 and/or HA magnetic enrichment. EpCAMneg dual-positive (CKpos/CD45pos) cells could be traced in 28 out of 29 samples [range 1–480]. By single-cell array-based comparative genomic hybridization we were able to demonstrate the malignant nature of one EpCAMneg subpopulation. In conclusion, we established a novel enhanced CTC enrichment strategy to capture EpCAMneg CTCs from clinical blood samples by targeting various cell surface antigens with antibody mixtures and ECM components.

Highlights

  • Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are cancer cells that actively invaded (“motile cells”) or have been shed (“mobile cells”) from the primary tumor into the blood circulation [1]

  • Regarding the expression of Trop2, CD49f as well as ADAM8 within the EpCAMpos cell lines, HER2-amplified SKBR3 cells revealed more abundant expression levels compared to MCF7

  • We found similar moving averages on chromosome 1, 2 and 11 for both EpCAMneg cells and the EpCAMpos CTC (Fig 7B, highlighted in grey)

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Summary

Introduction

CTCs are cancer cells that actively invaded (“motile cells”) or have been shed (“mobile cells”) from the primary tumor into the blood circulation [1]. They are considered as cells with metastatic progenitor characteristics and might be useful surrogates for cancer progression and heterogeneity. CTCs have been shown to represent a powerful tool to optimize personalized management of metastatic breast cancer They are of strong clinical value [2,3,4] and can be assessed as “liquid biopsy” [5] in a fairly easy, fast, and low invasive fashion. To overcome EpCAM-dependence, alternative markers for more comprehensive and efficient CTC detection approaches have to be defined

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