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Integrating global gene expression and radiation survival parameters across the 60
cell lines of the National Cancer Institute Anticancer Drug Screen.
Amundson SA, Do KT, Vinikoor LC, Lee RA, Koch-Paiz CA, Ahn J, Reimers M, Chen Y, Scudiero DA,
Weinstein JN, Trent JM, Bittner ML, Meltzer PS, Fornace AJ Jr.
Cancer Res. 2008 Jan 15;68(2):415-24.
Abstract:
The 60 cell lines of the National Cancer Institute Anticancer Drug Screen (NCI-60) constitute the most
extensively characterized in vitro cancer cell model. They have been tested for sensitivity to more than 100,000
potential chemotherapy agents and have been profiled extensively at the DNA, RNA, protein, functional, and pharmacologic
levels. We have used the NCI-60 cell lines and three additional lines to develop a database of responses of cancer cells
to ionizing radiation. We compared clonogenic survival, apoptosis, and gene expression response by microarray. Although
several studies have profiled relative basal gene expression in the NCI-60, this is the first comparison of large-scale
gene expression changes in response to genotoxic stress. Twenty-two genes were differentially regulated in cells with
low survival after 2-Gy gamma-rays; 14 genes identified lines more sensitive to 8 Gy. Unlike reported basal gene
expression patterns, changes in expression in response to radiation showed little tissue-of-origin effect, except for
differentiating the lymphoblastoid cell lines from other cell types. Basal expression patterns, however, discriminated
well between radiosensitive and more resistant lines, possibly being more informative than radiation response signatures.
The most striking patterns in the radiation data were a set of genes up-regulated preferentially in the p53 wild-type
lines and a set of cell cycle regulatory genes down-regulated across the entire NCI-60 panel. The response of those genes
to gamma-rays seems to be unaffected by the myriad of genetic differences across this diverse cell set; it represents
the most penetrant gene expression response to ionizing radiation yet observed.
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