Abstract

BackgroundCurrently, in vivo model for personalised cancer drug testing is challenging. A zebrafish larvae xenograft model has been applied in recent years to cancer research, particularly for drug testing purposes, showing promising results in drug testing against patient-derived tumour xenografts. Currently, these xenograft models apply imaging techniques to measure drug efficacy. However, this method carries several limitations, including timely imaging, thereby reducing the available number of tested fish and drugs. Here, we propose a PCR-based fast assay to evaluate drug efficacy in a zebrafish larvae xenograft model.MethodsWe tested two primary and corresponding metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) cell lines and patient-derived tongue cancer sample applying zebrafish larvae xenograft model. Cisplatin efficacy was tested using imaging technique and compared the results with PCR-based methods. Drug screening of eight compounds was applied on both cell lines and patient sample using PCR.ResultsIn a head-to-head comparison, all the three techniques (imaging, quantitative PCR, and droplet digital PCR) showed similar reduction of the cancer cells growth after cisplatin treatment. Using the quantitative PCR assay, we demonstrated a dose-dependent response of HNSCC cells to cisplatin. Drug screening results of four HNSCC cell lines and patient sample revealed different drug efficacy between tested cancer cells.ConclusionWe introduce a novel, easy, fast and cost-effective PCR-based in vivo zebrafish larvae assay to test the response of cell lines and clinical tumour samples to anti-cancer drugs. This method goes hand-by-hand with the commonly used imaging assay.

Highlights

  • In vivo model for personalised cancer drug testing is challenging

  • A zebrafish larvae xenograft has been used in recent years as a promising in vivo model in cancer research [7,8,9,10,11,12]

  • Two studies reported its application as a model for personalised colon and gastric cancer drug testing using patient-derived xenografts [7, 9]

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Summary

Introduction

A zebrafish larvae xeno‐ graft model has been applied in recent years to cancer research, for drug testing purposes, showing promising results in drug testing against patient-derived tumour xenografts These xenograft models apply imaging techniques to measure drug efficacy. A zebrafish larvae xenograft has been used in recent years as a promising in vivo model in cancer research [7,8,9,10,11,12] This model carries several advantages, including a large number of offspring, a small size (can fit in a 96-well plate), a short experimental duration, a low cost and the possibility of completing high-throughput testing. We compare the results of this assay with an already-established imaging assay

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