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Next-Generation cDNA Screening for Oncogene and Resistance Phenotypes

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2012

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Public Library of Science
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Shindoh, Nobuaki, Akinori Yoda, Yuka Yoda, Timothy J. Sullivan, Oliver Weigert, Andrew A. Lane, Nadja Kopp, et al. 2012. Next-generation cDNA screening for oncogene and resistance phenotypes. PLoS ONE 7(11): e49201.

Abstract

There is a pressing need for methods to define the functional relevance of genetic alterations identified by next-generation sequencing of cancer specimens. We developed new approaches to efficiently construct full-length cDNA libraries from small amounts of total RNA, screen for transforming and resistance phenotypes, and deconvolute by next-generation sequencing. Using this platform, we screened a panel of cDNA libraries from primary specimens and cell lines in cytokine-dependent murine Ba/F3 cells. We demonstrate that cDNA library-based screening can efficiently identify DNA and RNA alterations that confer either cytokine-independent proliferation or resistance to targeted inhibitors, including RNA alterations and intergenic fusions. Using barcoded next-generation sequencing, we simultaneously deconvoluted cytokine-independent clones recovered after transduction of 21 cDNA libraries. This approach identified multiple gain-of-function alleles, including KRAS G12D, NRAS Q61K and an activating splice variant of ERBB2. This approach has broad applicability for identifying transcripts that confer proliferation, resistance and other phenotypes in vitro and potentially in vivo.

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Biology, Computational Biology, Genomics, Genome Analysis Tools, Genetic Screens, Genetics, Molecular Genetics, Gene Identification and Analysis, Cancer Genetics, Genetic Mutation, Genome Sequencing, Medicine, Oncology, Basic Cancer Research, Cancers and Neoplasms

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