Monday, November 02, 2009

Cancer Proliferation Gene Discovery through Functional Genomics




http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/319/5863/620

Schlabach MR, Luo J, Solimini NL, Hu G, Xu Q, Li
MZ, Zhao Z, Smogorzewska A, Sowa ME, Ang XL, Westbrook TF, Liang AC, Chang K, Hackett JA, Harper JW, Hannon GJ, Elledge SJ.

Science.2008 Apr 18;320(5874):316.

It is well-known that because of the wide variety of cellular mechanisms used by different cancers to achieve tumorigenesis and metastasis, identifying genes involved in each of these mechanisms to be used as potential drug targets is a nontrivial problem. Schlabach et al. have developed shRNA libraries that can be easily screened using DNA barcodes and microarray deconvolution. These libraries can be used to rapidly perform dropout screens to identify genes involved in cancer proliferation. In order to efficiently and rapidly quantify the pool of shRNAs, the authors develop a methodology they call half-hairpin (HH) barcoding. Essentially, while shRNAs are comprised of hairpin loops with both sense and anti-sense strands, only the anti-sense strand of each hairpin is amplified and used to produce oligonucleotides for the microarray. 19-nucleotide HH barcodes are advantageous compared with 60-nucleotide full-hairpin barcodes becausethey allow more rapid construction and screening and eliminate probe self-annealing, and they have been shown to be highly reproducible and highly specific. Genes with proliferative or anti-proliferative phenotypes can be detected through changes in levels of the hairpins over time, which can be identified through the competitive hybridization of barcodes of shRNA populations before and after they have been propagated for a few weeks.


The authors constructed a pool of 8203 distinct shRNAs targeting 2924 genes that are cancer-related or are known to play roles in well characterized pathways involving phosphorylation, dephosphorylation, or ubiquitination. They used their screening platform to identify genes with proliferative and anti-proliferative phenotypes in DLD-1 and HCT116 colon cancer cells, human HCC1954 breast cancer cells, and normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs). Comparing different cancers with distinct origins allows identification of growth regulatory pathways that are common to both types of cancer as well as cancer-specific growth regulatory pathways. The shRNAs were placed in a murine stem cell virus (MSCV)-derived retroviral vector, and cells were infected with an average representation of 1000 independent integrations per shRNA. Hairpins from initial and end samples were PCR-recovered and dyed red and green, respectively. Red probes indicate a gene necessary for growth, and green probes indicate a tumor suppressor. This method was shown to be highly reproducible, as the results of independent trials were very highly correlated.


Most shRNAs showed unappreciable changes in abundance over time, but some showed depletion. Many of these showed depletion in all four cell lines, but others showed selective depletion in certain cell lines and not in others. Upon hierarchical clustering of the cell types based on similarity of gene dropout and enrichment, the two colon cancer cell lines were the most similar to one another, as expected, and the normal HMECs were the most segregated from the other three. Genes that were selectively silenced in the cancer cell lines and not in HMECs, such as the cell cycle regulator and spindle checkpoint kinase BUB1, reflect underlying differences between the reproductive and proliferative machinery of cancer cells and normal cells and should be further investigated as potential drug targets in the future. Additionally, knowledge of which genes are necessary for cancer cell survival may lead to a better understanding of important signaling pathways common in cancer cells.

The authors do a good job of thoroughly explaining and testing a method that promises to be very useful in better characterizing pathways essential in cancer cell proliferation. The half-hairpin barcoding methodology described has the ability to uncover a large number of potential drug targets for the treatment of cancer. However, this technique should not be counted on for a thorough analysis of all genes selectively required for survival of tumor cells in various cancers. Many shRNAs seem not to show up at all on the microarray, probably because they were never successfully integrated into the genome of the human cell. Another interesting point is that the initial samples were taken after the cells had been sitting for over 48 hours, probably because before this time, a large portion of the viral vectors were not integrated into the host genome. It is possible that cells may undergo important changes during this waiting period. For example, if a shRNA targets an anti-apoptosis gene before two days pass and causes cell death, this phenomenon would go unnoticed. While this method may uncover many genes that are important in cancer tumorigenesis and lead to the discovery of new drugs for cancer treatment, it cannot be counted on to generate a comprehensive library of genes with proliferative phenotypes in cancer cells that are potential drug targets.

Michel Nofal
19384585

7 comments:

Vicalicious said...

One of the more unique posts by far. Well done Mike Chel Chelly Chel!

tim wang said...

This paper seems really similar to a another study by Luo et al in PNAS (http://www.pnas.org/content/105/51/20380.full.pdf+html). In that study, they were able to differentiate between different cell of different tissue origins and identify the essential genes conferring drug resistance. Do you think that the screening technique you described are equally powerful?

Philip Chung said...

Why did the authors specifically choose 19-Nucleotide sequences? Was there a smaller number that could have been chosen to confer similar specificity? 4^19 seems like an enormously and excessively large number of sequence possibilities. Wouldn't it be simpler to use shorter sequences?

Apple said...

the expressed genes from distinct cancer origins might be involved in both proliferation and metastasis. how can this method distinguish one from another and make sure the genes are responsible for proliferation?

Vaibhavi Umesh said...

Many healthy rapidly diving cells in the body may overexpress certain genes that are known to play a role in increasing cell proliferation. Hence we know cancer involves many genetic pathways, and many factors that enhance tumor growth, or in some cases fail to suppress tumor growth.

If this method identifies genes involved with cell proliferation, how will this help develop target therapies for cancer since these genes are overexpressed in some normal cells in the body as well? Can this method be adapted to screen for multiple known cancer markers simultaneously in a given cell to attempt to identify a genetic pathway more specific to cancer cells?

Lloyd Lee said...

How long are these shRNA markers viable for? Once perfected, it really seems like this kind of 'barcoding' technique can really change the way one goes about isolating factors for proliferation. Does the paper hint on any future works in maximizing the usability of this whole scheme?

Michel Nofal said...

@Victor
Thanks.

@Tim
I think the Luo paper you cited describes a very similar method for cancer proliferation gene discovery. It seems that Luo et al. did a more comprehensive study with more genes included in their screen, but as far as the procedure goes, there don't seem to be any huge differences between the techniques described by each group.

@Philip
While 4^19 is a large number, this calculation is making the assumption that the gene sequences are entirely random, which they are not. Many of the gene sequences used to barcode are similar, as they often encode similar genes in the same organism and performing similar functions. Also, short RNA molecules are more likely to be degraded; larger shRNAs are not subject to the same degradation.

@Apple
This screen is just an identifier of genes involved in proliferation. As I stated near the bottom of my post, this screen should not be used to identify all genes which play a role in cancer's devastating effect on humans. Identifying genes involved in metastasis is an entirely different problem.

@Vaibhavi
The purpose of this screen is to identify the genes that are more critical for the survival of cancer cells than normal cells. That way, a drug that targets this gene will not affect normal cells as much as it will affect cancer cells. This method does not directly uncover anything about pathways involved in cancer proliferation, just single genes. Once these genes are identified, they can be the potential subjects of further research, which will perhaps later lead to discoveries about pathways which people know little about.

@Lloyd
While the paper does not specifically say how long, these shRNA markers seem to be viable for quite some time -- at least long enough to conduct this experiment effectively. This technique absolutely does have 'usability,' as it pinpoints genes that researchers know little about that may be essential for the survival of cancer cells. These genes can be further investigated as potential drug targets. With some luck, new anti-cancer drugs can be developed against these genes.