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Merck
  • Characterization of a diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma cell line: implications for future investigations and treatment.

Characterization of a diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma cell line: implications for future investigations and treatment.

Journal of neuro-oncology (2012-09-18)
Rintaro Hashizume, Ivan Smirnov, Sharon Liu, Joanna J Phillips, Jeanette Hyer, Tracy R McKnight, Michael Wendland, Michael Prados, Anu Banerjee, Theodore Nicolaides, Sabine Mueller, Charles D James, Nalin Gupta
摘要

Diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas arise almost exclusively in children, and despite advances in treatment, the majority of patients die within 2 years after initial diagnosis. Because of their infiltrative nature and anatomic location in an eloquent area of the brain, most pontine gliomas are treated without a surgical biopsy. The corresponding lack of tissue samples has resulted in a limited understanding of the underlying genetic and molecular biologic abnormalities associated with pontine gliomas, and is a substantial obstacle for the preclinical testing of targeted therapeutic agents for these tumors. We have established a human glioma cell line that originated from surgical biopsy performed on a patient with a pontine glioma. To insure sustainable in vitro propagation, tumor cells were modified with hTERT (human telomerase ribonucleoprotein reverse transcriptase), and with a luciferase reporter to enable non-invasive bioluminescence imaging. The hTERT modified cells are tumorigenic in athymic rodents, and produce brainstem tumors that recapitulate the infiltrative growth of brainstem gliomas in patients.

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Sigma-Aldrich
SF7761 Human DIPG H3.3-K27M Cell Line, SF7761 pediatric diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) cell line harbors the histone H3.3 Lys 27-to-methionine (K27M) mutation and can support research and drug development efforts targeting DIPG.
Sigma-Aldrich
CWR-R1ca Human Prostate Cancer Cell Line, CWR-R1ca Human Prostate Cancer Cell Line is a valuable cell model for castration-recurrent prostate cancer studies.