Ellen Marie Kuerbitz, Deepika Dhawan, Sagar Utturkar, Mario Francis Sola, Alexander William Enstrom, Lindsey Marie Fourez, Deborah Wagner Knapp
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
For human and canine invasive urothelial carcinoma (InvUC), there is growing interest in using the molecular characteristics of a tumour to guide individualised treatment strategies. The objective of this study was to use a non-invasive, urine-based method to characterise gene expression signatures in dogs with InvUC. RNA was isolated from canine InvUC tumour samples, urine sediment from dogs with InvUC, normal canine bladder mucosa, and normal canine urine sediment and queried using the nCounter Canine Immuno-Oncology Panel. Differential gene expression profiles were characterised for tissue and urine samples, and nCounter results were compared to bulk RNA-seq gene expression profiles. The effect of spiking normal urine with white blood cells (WBCs) from the same dog was also assessed. Key genes involved in antitumor immune responses and oncogenic signalling pathways, including potential small molecule inhibitor targets, were differentially expressed in tumour and urine samples from dogs with InvUC, compared to normal samples. nCounter-generated gene expression profiles for tumour tissue and urine from dogs with InvUC were highly correlated, whereas the correlation between the nCounter IO panel and bulk RNA-seq results for InvUC tissue was moderate. The addition of WBCs to normal urine affected the gene expression profiles. Analysis of canine urine using the nCounter canine IO panel has good potential for revealing gene expression patterns in InvUC. Additional studies are warranted to determine the extent to which WBC infiltration affects the results related to immune response patterns and the expression of other genes.
期刊介绍:
Veterinary and Comparative Oncology (VCO) is an international, peer-reviewed journal integrating clinical and scientific information from a variety of related disciplines and from worldwide sources for all veterinary oncologists and cancer researchers concerned with aetiology, diagnosis and clinical course of cancer in domestic animals and its prevention. With the ultimate aim of diminishing suffering from cancer, the journal supports the transfer of knowledge in all aspects of veterinary oncology, from the application of new laboratory technology to cancer prevention, early detection, diagnosis and therapy. In addition to original articles, the journal publishes solicited editorials, review articles, commentary, correspondence and abstracts from the published literature. Accordingly, studies describing laboratory work performed exclusively in purpose-bred domestic animals (e.g. dogs, cats, horses) will not be considered.