Abstract
Leiomyosarcoma (LMS) is an aggressive mesenchymal malignancy, which originates from the smooth muscle cells or from the precursor mesenchymal stem cells that potentially differentiate into smooth muscle cells. LMS is one of the most common sarcomas. LMS has genomic instability, reflecting complex and unbalanced karyotypes, and the cytogenetic and molecular changes in LMS are not consistent. The standard treatment of the primary LMS is complete resection, and the metastasis is often observed even after curative surgery. Patient-derived cancer models are a key bioresource to develop a novel therapy, and we aimed to establish and characterize a novel cell line for LMS. We established a cell line from tumor tissues of the patient with LMS and named it NCC-LMS3-C1. We maintained NCC-LMS3-C1 cells for 12months and passed them more than 30 times. Genome-wide copy number analysis demonstrated that NCC-LMS3-C1 cells harbored genetic abnormalities. NCC-LMS3-C1 cells exhibited aggressive phenotypes such as continuous growth, spheroid formation, and invasion in the tissue culture condition, which may reflect the clinical behaviors of LMS. We performed a drug screening using NCC-LMS3-C1 cells and found that four anti-cancer agents, such as bortezomib, dasatinib, mitoxantrone, and romidepsin, had remarkable anti-proliferative effects on NCC-LMS3-C1 cells. We conclude that NCC-LMS3-C1 cells will be a useful resource for the study of LMS.
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