Abstract
Intratumoral heterogeneity (ITH) is a hallmark of cancer. The advent of single-cell technologies has helped uncover ITH in a high-throughput manner in different cancers across varied contexts. Here we apply single-cell sequencing technologies to reveal striking ITH in assumptively oligoclonal pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cell lines. Our findings reveal a high degree of both genomic and transcriptomic heterogeneity in established and globally utilized PDAC cell lines, custodial variation induced by growing apparently identical PDAC cell lines in different laboratories, and profound transcriptomic shifts in transitioning from 2D to 3D spheroid growth models. Our findings also call into question the validity of widely available immortalized, non-transformed pancreatic lines as contemporaneous “control” lines in experiments. Further, while patient-derived organoid (PDOs) are known to reflect the cognate in vivo biology of the parental tumor, we identify transcriptomic shifts during ex vivo passage that might hamper their predictive abilities over time. The impact of these findings on rigor and reproducibility of experimental data generated using established preclinical PDAC models between and across laboratories is uncertain, but a matter of concern.
Competing Interest Statement
A.M. receives royalties for a pancreatic cancer biomarker test from Cosmos Wisdom Biotechnology, and this financial relationship is managed and monitored by the UTMDACC Conflict of Interest Committee. A.M. is also listed as an inventor on a patent that has been licensed by Johns Hopkins University to ThriveEarlier Detection.
Footnotes
Funding: A.M. is supported by the MD Anderson Pancreatic Cancer Moon Shot Program, the Khalifa Bin Zayed Al-Nahyan Foundation, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH U01CA196403, U01CA200468, P50CA221707). J.J.L. is supported by the NIH (T32CA009599). A.S. is supported by the German Research Foundation (SE- 2616/2–1). V.B. is supported by the NIH (U54CA096300, U54CA096297, and T32CA217789)
Disclosures: A.M. receives royalties for a pancreatic cancer biomarker test from Cosmos Wisdom Biotechnology, and this financial relationship is managed and monitored by the UTMDACC Conflict of Interest Committee. A.M. is also listed as an inventor on a patent that has been licensed by Johns Hopkins University to ThriveEarlier Detection.