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Phenotyping of lymphoproliferative tumours generated in xenografts of non-small cell lung cancer

View ORCID ProfileDavid R. Pearce, View ORCID ProfileAyse U. Akarca, View ORCID ProfileRoel P. H. De Maeyer, Emily Kostina, View ORCID ProfileAriana Huebner, View ORCID ProfileMonica Sivakumar, View ORCID ProfileTakahiro Karasaki, View ORCID ProfileKavina Shah, View ORCID ProfileSam M. Janes, View ORCID ProfileNicholas McGranahan, View ORCID ProfileVenkat Reddy, View ORCID ProfileArne N. Akbar, David A. Moore, View ORCID ProfileTeresa Marafioti, View ORCID ProfileCharles Swanton, View ORCID ProfileRobert E. Hynds
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.24.520089
David R. Pearce
1CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
2Cancer Evolution and Genome Stability Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, London, U.K.
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  • ORCID record for David R. Pearce
Ayse U. Akarca
3Department of Cellular Pathology, University College London Hospitals, London, U.K.
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  • ORCID record for Ayse U. Akarca
Roel P. H. De Maeyer
4Division of Medicine, University College London, London, U.K.
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  • ORCID record for Roel P. H. De Maeyer
Emily Kostina
5Epithelial Cell Biology in ENT Research (EpiCENTR) Group, Developmental Biology and Cancer Department, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London, London, U.K.
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Ariana Huebner
1CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
2Cancer Evolution and Genome Stability Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, London, U.K.
6Cancer Genome Evolution Research Group, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
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Monica Sivakumar
1CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
3Department of Cellular Pathology, University College London Hospitals, London, U.K.
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Takahiro Karasaki
2Cancer Evolution and Genome Stability Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, London, U.K.
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  • ORCID record for Takahiro Karasaki
Kavina Shah
4Division of Medicine, University College London, London, U.K.
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Sam M. Janes
7Lungs for Living Research Centre, UCL Respiratory, Division of Medicine, University College London, London, U.K.
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Nicholas McGranahan
1CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
6Cancer Genome Evolution Research Group, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
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Venkat Reddy
4Division of Medicine, University College London, London, U.K.
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Arne N. Akbar
4Division of Medicine, University College London, London, U.K.
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David A. Moore
1CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
3Department of Cellular Pathology, University College London Hospitals, London, U.K.
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Teresa Marafioti
3Department of Cellular Pathology, University College London Hospitals, London, U.K.
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  • ORCID record for Teresa Marafioti
  • For correspondence: rob.hynds@ucl.ac.uk charles.swanton@crick.ac.uk t.marafioti@ucl.ac.uk
Charles Swanton
1CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
2Cancer Evolution and Genome Stability Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, London, U.K.
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  • For correspondence: rob.hynds@ucl.ac.uk charles.swanton@crick.ac.uk t.marafioti@ucl.ac.uk
Robert E. Hynds
1CRUK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence, UCL Cancer Institute, University College London, London, U.K.
2Cancer Evolution and Genome Stability Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, London, U.K.
5Epithelial Cell Biology in ENT Research (EpiCENTR) Group, Developmental Biology and Cancer Department, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London, London, U.K.
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  • For correspondence: rob.hynds@ucl.ac.uk charles.swanton@crick.ac.uk t.marafioti@ucl.ac.uk
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ABSTRACT

Patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models involve the engraftment of tumour tissue in immunocompromised mice and represent an important pre-clinixtcal oncology research. A limitation of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) PDX model derivation in NOD-scid IL2Rgammanull (NSG) mice is that a subset of initial engraftments are of lymphocytic, rather than tumour origin. In the lung TRACERx PDX pipeline, lymphoproliferations occurred in 17.8% of lung adenocarcinoma and 10% of lung squamous cell carcinoma transplantations, despite none of these patients having a prior or subsequent clinical history of lymphoproliferative disease. Lymphoproliferations were predominantly human CD20+ B cells and had the immunophenotype expected for post-transplantation diffuse large B cell lymphoma. All lymphoproliferations expressed Epstein-Barr-encoded RNAs (EBER). Analysis of immunoglobulin light chain gene rearrangements in three tumours where multiple tumour regions had resulted in lymphoproliferations suggested that each had independent clonal origins. Overall, these data suggest the presence of B cell clones with lymphoproliferative potential within primary NSCLC tumours that are under continuous immune surveillance. Since these cells can be expanded following transplantation into NSG mice, our data highlight the value of quality control measures to identify lymphoproliferations within xenograft pipelines and support the incorporation of strategies to minimise lymphoproliferations during the early stages of xenograft establishment pipelines. To present the histology data herein, we developed a Python-based tool for generating patient-level pathology overview figures from whole-slide image files; PATHOverview is available on GitHub (https://github.com/EpiCENTR-Lab/PATHOverview).

Competing Interest Statement

C.S. acknowledges grant support from AstraZeneca, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Bristol Myers Squibb, Pfizer, Roche-Ventana, Invitae (previously Archer Dx Inc - collaboration in minimal residual disease sequencing technologies), and Ono Pharmaceutical. C.S. is an AstraZeneca Advisory Board member and Chief Investigator for the AZ MeRmaiD 1 and 2 clinical trials and is also Co-Chief Investigator of the NHS Galleri trial funded by GRAIL and a paid member of GRAIL's Scientific Advisory Board. C.S. receives consultant fees from Achilles Therapeutics (also SAB member), Bicycle Therapeutics (also a SAB member), Genentech, Medicxi, Roche Innovation Centre - Shanghai, Metabomed (until July 2022), and the Sarah Cannon Research Institute. C.S has received honoraria from Amgen, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline, MSD, Bristol Myers Squibb, Illumina, and Roche-Ventana. C.S. had stock options in Apogen Biotechnologies and GRAIL until June 2021, and currently has stock options in Epic Bioscience, Bicycle Therapeutics, and has stock options and is co-founder of Achilles Therapeutics. C.S. holds patents relating to assay technology to detect tumour recurrence (PCT/GB2017/053289); to targeting neoantigens (PCT/EP2016/059401), identifying patent response to immune checkpoint blockade (PCT/EP2016/071471), determining HLA LOH (PCT/GB2018/052004), predicting survival rates of patients with cancer (PCT/GB2020/050221), identifying patients who respond to cancer treatment (PCT/GB2018/051912), US patent relating to detecting tumour mutations (PCT/US2017/28013), methods for lung cancer detection (US20190106751A1) and both a European and US patent related to identifying insertion/deletion mutation targets (PCT/GB2018/051892).

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.
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Posted January 24, 2023.
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Phenotyping of lymphoproliferative tumours generated in xenografts of non-small cell lung cancer
David R. Pearce, Ayse U. Akarca, Roel P. H. De Maeyer, Emily Kostina, Ariana Huebner, Monica Sivakumar, Takahiro Karasaki, Kavina Shah, Sam M. Janes, Nicholas McGranahan, Venkat Reddy, Arne N. Akbar, David A. Moore, Teresa Marafioti, Charles Swanton, Robert E. Hynds
bioRxiv 2023.01.24.520089; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.24.520089
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Phenotyping of lymphoproliferative tumours generated in xenografts of non-small cell lung cancer
David R. Pearce, Ayse U. Akarca, Roel P. H. De Maeyer, Emily Kostina, Ariana Huebner, Monica Sivakumar, Takahiro Karasaki, Kavina Shah, Sam M. Janes, Nicholas McGranahan, Venkat Reddy, Arne N. Akbar, David A. Moore, Teresa Marafioti, Charles Swanton, Robert E. Hynds
bioRxiv 2023.01.24.520089; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.24.520089

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