학술논문

Drug sensitivity of single cancer cells is predicted by changes in mass accumulation rate
Document Type
Report
Source
Nature Biotechnology. November 2016, Vol. 34 Issue 11, p1161, 7 p.
Subject
Drug interactions -- Observations
Cancer cells -- Health aspects
Biotechnology industry
Business
Observations
Health aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1087-0156
Abstract
Assays that can determine the response of tumor cells to cancer therapeutics could greatly aid the selection of drug regimens for individual patients. However, the utility of current functional assays is limited, and predictive genetic biomarkers are available for only a small fraction of cancer therapies. We found that the single-cell mass accumulation rate (MAR), profiled over many hours with a suspended microchannel resonator, accurately defined the drug sensitivity or resistance of glioblastoma and B-cell acute lymphocytic leukemia cells. MAR revealed heterogeneity in drug sensitivity not only between different tumors, but also within individual tumors and tumor-derived cell lines. MAR measurement predicted drug response using samples as small as 25 [mu]l of peripheral blood while maintaining cell viability and compatibility with downstream characterization. MAR measurement is a promising approach for directly assaying single-cell therapeutic responses and for identifying cellular subpopulations with phenotypic resistance in heterogeneous tumors.
Author(s): Mark M Stevens [1, 2]; Cecile L Maire [3]; Nigel Chou [1, 4]; Mark A Murakami [3]; David S Knoff [3]; Yuki Kikuchi [1, 5]; Robert J Kimmerling [1, [...]