The present invention relates to the field of cancer diagnosis, prognosis and therapy. In particular, the present invention relates to a method of evaluating the metastatic potential of cancer cells, in particular but not limited to breast cancer cells, and to a method of rational treatment of cancer patients.
Cancer is one of the major killers of humans and many problems remain in its clinical management, from primary diagnosis to treatment of advanced disease.
At present many tumour grading systems are used to assess the metastatic potential of malignant neoplasms. Most methods involve the drawback of relying of an examination of dead tissue derived from the tumour — this is the case if the system describe tumour architecture and/or cytology. As an alternative, motility assays relying on visual inspection of live cells has been employed with some success. However, there exists a need for a reliable and reproducible means for assessing tumour aggressiveness, in particular tumour metastatic potential. None of these grading systems provide any information relating to specific targeted therapy of a malignancy.
Breast cancer (BCa) is the most common type of cancer and leading cause of cancer death in women with over 2 million new cases reported in 2018 (Bray et al., 2018). BCa-related deaths often occur when dysregulated tumour signalling occurs compounded by metastasis (Sever and Brugge, 2015). A strongly metastatic and aggressive form of BCa is the triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), where genes for the oestrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) are not expressed, and there is no amplification of the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) (Perou et al., 2000; Lee and Djamgoz, 2018). This renders TNBC particularly difficult to treat as the commonly applied hormone therapies rely on targeting at least one of these three receptors (Al-Mahmood et al., 2018).
The MDA-MB-231 cell line is used commonly as a model of TNBC and has a mesenchymal phenotype (Hero et al., 2019). Its underlying intracellular signalling pathways have been studied using both genomic analyses and expression profiles (Perou et al., 2000; Sorlie et al., 2001; Neve et al., 2006). Indeed, these cells exhibit in vitro characteristics representative of cancer cell behaviour in vivo (Sever and Brugge, 2015).
In recent years, expression of ion channels and transporters (ICTs) has been implicated in various stages of the cancer process, such as cell proliferation, apoptosis, migration, and invasiveness (Lastraioli et al., 2015). This highlights the importance of studying cancer cell electrophysiology. In particular, voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) may play a potentiating role in metastasis (Arcangeli et al., 2008; Fraser and Pardo, 2008; Prevarskaya et al., 2010; Cuddapah and Sontheimer, 2011; Djamgoz et al., 2014; Djamgoz et al., 2019). VGSCs are typically known for their role in producing action potentials in excitable cells, such as neurons and myocytes.
Djamgoz advanced the view (“Celex Hypothesis”) that it is the de novo VGSC expression and the resulting “membrane excitability” that would promote cancer cell aggressiveness and, ultimately, metastasis (Djamgoz, 2011; Djamgoz et al., 2014). Such studies have been aided by the availability of rich pharmacology for ion channels, as well as genetic studies. In human and rodent cell lines, single-cell patch clamp recordings revealed that VGSCs can be blocked specifically with tetrodotoxin (TTX) (Grimes et al., 1995; Roger et al., 2003). In turn, TTX application would lead to suppression of invasiveness in vitro and metastasis in vivo (Grimes et al., 1995; Roger et al., 2003; Fraser et al., 2005; Yildirim et al., 2012; Djamgoz et al., 2019).
Breast cancer is one of the most prevalent types of cancers worldwide and yet, its pathophysiology is poorly understood. This is particularly the case for the TBNC subtype. Single-cell electrophysiological studies have provided evidence that membrane depolarisation is implicated in the proliferation and metastasis of breast cancer. However, metastatic breast cancer cells are highly dynamic microscopic systems with complexities beyond a single-cell level. There is an urgent need for technologies capable of decoding the intercellular signalling pathways and networks that control proliferation and metastasis, particularly at a population level.
It is an object of embodiments of the invention to provide methods for assessing the metastatic potential of cancer cells, in particular of breast cancer cells.
Single-cell patch clamp recording is used for investigating membrane currents or voltages associated with ion channels upon the application of an external stimulus, under current or voltage clamp conditions, respectively. Whilst this sort of intracellular monitoring under an applied electrical stimulus can provide detailed information at the cellular level, the technique would suffer from the imposition of a micro-pipette electrode the volume of which is much bigger than the cell. Furthermore, for reliable in vitro models and studies of phenomena such as cancer cell invasion, the application of an external stimulus is likely to influence natural interlinked cell-cell dynamics. Additionally, cancer cell proliferation, invasion and metastasis typically involve a cell cohort, and hence it would be advantageous to monitor the network phenomena together with the electrical activity of single cells. Changes in the cell cohort during metastasis, when cancer cells spread to tissues and organs beyond the original tumour’s location, are of paramount clinical importance. Hence, patch clamping alone lacks the ability for non-invasive network mapping within the tumour bulk. Monitoring unbiased cell invasion at a population level coupled with individual cellular measurements is therefore critical for understanding tumour proliferation, invasion and metastasis.
It has been found by the present inventor(s) that it is possible by non-invasive in vitro means to obtain electrical recordings of strongly metastatic MDA-MB-231 and weakly/non-metastatic MCF-7 breast cancer cell lines and that the recordings correlate with the metastatic activity/potential of the cancer cells.
To accomplish this, use was made of an ultra-low noise sensor that exploits large-area electrodes, of 2 mm2, which maximizes the double-layer capacitance and concomitant detection sensitivity (Rocha et al., 2016a). It was demonstrated that the current recorded after adherence of the cells is dominated by the opening of voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs), confirmed by experiments including application of the highly specific inhibitor, tetrodotoxin (TTX). The electrical activity of MDA-MB-231 cells was demonstrated to surpass that of the MCF-7 cells, strongly suggesting a link between the cells’ bioelectricity and invasiveness. An activity pattern with characteristics similar to that of Random Telegraph Signal (RTS) noise was also demonstrated. RTS patterns were less frequent than the asynchronous VGSC signals. The RTS noise power spectral density showed a Lorentzian shape, which revealed the presence of a low-frequency signal across MDA-MB-231 cell populations with propagation speeds of the same order as those reported for intercellular Ca2+ waves.
The invention thus paves the way for real- time investigations of the bioelectricity of cancer cells, their ionic/pharmacological properties, and their relation to metastatic potential of the cells.
The present invention unambiguously shows that human breast cancer cells are not electrically inert as might be expected; extracellular electrical signals in vitro are detected in a population of MDA-MB-231 cells, by means of the ultrasensitive measurement setup based on low-impedance electrodes. The electrical behaviour of MDA-MB-231 cells reveals an asynchronous pattern identified primarily as the product of their VGSC activity, as demonstrated by TTX inhibition experiments. In particular, it is demonstrated that strongly metastatic MDA-MB-231 cells are electrically active with VGSC-dependent spontaneous spiking, whilst the MCF-7 cells (the control), showed only very low-level electrical excitability.
This strongly suggests a link between electrical excitability and metastasis. In addition, a slower signal pattern with similar characteristics to that of RTS noise was detected. The calculated wave speed, based on the RTS pattern, was in agreement with previously reported values for intercellular Ca2+ waves.
It is believed that these findings will open new avenues for more accurate pharmacological investigations and action of drugs on cancer cell ensembles, in a personalised clinical setting.
So, in a first aspect the present invention relates to a method for determining the metastatic and/or invasive potential of a malignant neoplasm, the method comprising recording electrical activity in a sample of cells isolated from the malignant neoplasm and comparing recorded electrical activity of the sample with electrical activity of one or more reference cell samples having a defined metastatic and/or invasive potential and subsequently assigning a score for the metastatic and/or invasive potential of the malignant neoplasm by ranking the recorded electrical activity relative to the electrical activity of the one or more reference samples.
In a second aspect, the invention relates to a method for classifying the therapeutic potential of an agent or a combination of agents for prevention and/or inhibition of metastasis and/or invasive growth by a malignant neoplasm in a patient, the method comprising determining the metastatic and/or invasive potential of the malignant neoplasm according to the method of the first aspect of the invention and under conditions 1) in the absence of the agent or combination of agents and 2) where the agent or combination of agents is or has been added, wherein the agent or combination of agents is classified as having a therapeutic potential for treatment of the patient if it decreases the assigned score for metastatic and/or invasive potential in an in vivo acceptable concentration.
In a third aspect, the invention relates to method for treatment of a patient of a malignant neoplasm, the method comprising obtaining a sample of cells from the malignant neoplasm, classifying at least one agent or combination of agents vis-à-vis the sample according to the method of the second aspect of the invention and subsequently administering to the patient at least one of said agent or combination of agents that are classified as having a therapeutic potential.
Finally, in a fourth aspect of the invention is provided method for treatment of a patient, such as a human patient, of a malignant neoplasm, the method comprising administering an effective amount of an agent that reduces VGSC current, in particular the transient VGSC current, to the patient, wherein the effective amount is non-lethal to the cells of the malignant neoplasm and reduces or blocks invasive and/or metastatic growth of the cells of the malignant neoplasm, and wherein the metastatic and/or invasive potential of the cells of the patient’s malignant neoplasm has been determined according to a method of the first aspect of the invention, wherein multiple recordings are made, wherein some recordings are made in the presence of a VGSC (voltage-gated sodium channel) inhibiting agent, such as tetrodotoxin, and where addition of the VGSC inhibiting agent leads to a reduction in the electrical activity of the cells of the malignant neoplasm.
(a) Representative diagram of the MEA device with a layer of adherent cells. The layers of materials used and connections to the low-noise current amplifier (A) are also shown above the MEA. A cell density of 1×106 cells/ml was deposited, forming a confluent layer across all the electrodes.
(b) Morphology of MDA-MB-231 cell cohort as seen under a light
(c) Confluent layer of MDA-MB-231 cells adhered to one of the 2 mm2 electrodes. The dark area on the right shows the substrate and the light circular area to the left shows the electrode.
(d) Box plot from cell viability studies indicating no significant statistical difference between viability of cells on the MEA versus culture dish (“X” represents P = 0.98; n = 4 for both).
(a) Baseline current measured with only medium over the electrodes’ surface, showing a current of 0.5 pA. (b) Typical asynchronous spiking activity. (c) An expanded trace showing a fast, asynchronous spike. (d) Detailed section of fast spiking activity. (e) Detailed section of square shaped pulses.
(f - g) Results from spike characterization over a 12-hour period of asynchronous spiking activity of MDA-MB-231 cells, showing the distribution of amplitudes with bin intervals of 20 pA each (f) and pulse widths with bin intervals of 5 ms each (g) Bars represent average values of all 3 repeats and error bars represent SDs.
(h) Experiment results comparing the spike counts obtained from 24-hour measurements on strongly metastatic MDA-MB-231 cells versus weakly metastatic MCF-7 cells, showing a significantly smaller spike count for the latter.
(a) Current trace showing electrical activity before, during and after application of TTX.
(b) Quantification of the spikes recorded in (a). Number of spikes were measured in time bins of 6 minutes. Bars represent average values of all 3 repeats and error bars represent SDs.
(a) Characterisation of RTS “up” state.
(b) Characterisation of RTS “down” state.
(c) PSD for the RTS noise, showing a Lorentzian spectrum.
The expression “metastatic potential” refers to the ability of a malignant neoplasm to metastasize outside its current location in the body. The quantification of metastatic potential can take any convenient form. For instance, malignant neoplasms can be scored as “non-metastatic”, “low-metastatic”, and “high-metastatic” (or even more simple: “low-metastatic” and “high-metastatic”) based on clinical experience. Alternatively, numerical scores may be used based on any of several clinical observations (rate of formation of metastases, anatomical spread of new metastases, growth rate of metastases etc.). In the present invention, any of such grading systems can be utilised, because the neoplasm to be examined ultimately is compared to one or more cancers that have a previously established metastatic behaviour classified by any of these systems.
Likewise, the expression “invasive potential” refers to the ability of a malignant neoplasm to invade neighbouring tissue. The quantification of invasive potential can take any convenient form. For instance, malignant neoplasms can be scored as “non-invasive”, “low-invasive”, and “highly invasive” (or even more simple: “low-invasive” and “high-invasive”) based on clinical experience. Alternatively, numerical scores may be used based on any of a number of clinical observations (rate of formation of metastases, anatomical spread of new metastases, growth rate of metastases etc.). In the present invention, any of such grading systems can be utilised, because the neoplasm to be examined ultimately is compared to one or more cancers that have a previously established invasiveness classified by any of these systems.
“Electrical activity” of cells in the present context refers to recordable variations in the membrane potential (relative to the resting potential) measured in a population of cells; in turn, such variations in the membrane potential gives rise to measurable electrical currents. This can be compared to the electrical activity found in excitable cells such as neurons and myocytes, but as demonstrated herein the frequency of the membrane potential variations is much lower than the normally observed kHz range variations recorded from excitable cells. The electrical activity is typically termed “spikes” due to the appearance of variations when studying the membrane potential or electric current in the time domain.
The term “malignant neoplasm” (also termed “cancer”, and, if solid, “malignant tumour”) relates to a population of cells that exhibit the hallmarks of malignant cells: i.e. uncontrolled and uncoordinated growth, the ability to traverse tissue barriers (i.e. invasiveness), immortality or at least reduced programmed cell death, the ability to promote neovascularization, and metastatic growth.
A “reference cell sample” is a collection of cells, typically in the form of clonal cells or a cell line, which has a known capacity for invasive grown and metastatic behaviour. Examples of reference cells useful in the present invention are the breast cancer derived cell lines MDA-MB-231 (highly metastatic) and MCF-7 (low metastatic), but human cell lines of varying metastatic/invasive capacity are known from a large range of neoplasms. Such cell lines are commercially available and can e.g. be acquired from Sigma Aldrich (www.sigmaaldrich.com/life-science/cell-culture/cancer-cell-lines.html) or ATCC. Human cell lines particularly useful as reference are: PC-3/M, LNCaP (prostate cancer); SW620, SW48, HT29, HCT116 (colorectal cancer); H460, A549, H69, H209, H510 (lung cancer); SKOV-3, Caov-3 (ovarian cancer); HeLa, C33A, SiHa, CaSki (cervical cancer); BGC-823 and MKN-28 cells (stomach cancer); PANC-1, Mia PaCa-2 and BxPc3 (pancreatic cancer).
A voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) is an integral membrane protein forming a selective sodium ion channel through the cellular plasma membrane, which exhibit 3 main conformational states (closed, open, and inactive). The closed channel becomes permeable (open) for Na+ ions at a certain increase in the cell’s membrane potential, causing a rapid further increase in the membrane potential until a threshold level is reached at which the channel is inactivated leading to a gradual reversion to the resting potential. During this reversion, the channel shifts from the inactivated state to the closed state where it can again be opened by an increase in membrane potential. VGSC are found in excitable cells, but have also been demonstrated in malignant cells, where they have been associated with the characteristics of invasiveness and metastatic behaviour.
A “VGSC inhibiting agent” (also termed a “VGSC blocker”) is a substance that inhibits or completely blocks the Na+ transport by a VGSC. For the purpose of testing the VGSC contribution to electrical activity exhibited by a population of cancer cells, a convenient choice for a VGSC blocker is the highly toxic substance tetrodotoxin (TTX). For therapeutic purposes including each and any therapeutic aspect and embodiment disclosed herein, a number of other substances are useful: these include without limitation Ranolazine (N-(2,6-Dimethylphenyl)-4-[2-hydroxy-3-(2-methoxyphenoxy)propyl]-1-piperazineacetamide), Eleclazine (4-(pyrimidin-2-ylmethyl)-7-(4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenyl)-3,4-dihydrobenzo[f][1,4]oxazepin-5(2H)-one), 4-(pyrimidin-2-ylmethyl)-7-(4-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)-3,4-dihydrobenzo[f][1,4]oxazepin-5(2H)-one, and Riluzole (6-(Trifluoromethoxy)-2-benzothiazolamine).
In general, the disclosure below relates primarily to methods that target human malignant neoplastic diseases, so preferred embodiments of all aspects of the invention relate to human malignant neoplasms and human patients, wherever applicable. However, treatment of other animals, primarily mammals, is not excluded.
As indicated above, the first aspect relates to a method for determining the metastatic and/or invasive potential of a malignant neoplasm, the method comprising recording electrical activity in a sample of cells isolated from the malignant neoplasm and comparing recorded electrical activity of the sample with electrical activity of one or more reference cell samples having a defined metastatic and/or invasive potential and subsequently assigning a score for the metastatic and/or invasive potential of the malignant neoplasm by ranking the recorded electrical activity relative to the electrical activity of the one or more reference samples.
Ranking of the recorded electrical activity and assigning the score will typically entail that a standard 2D Cartesian coordinate system is established based on one type of electrical activity measurement values from relevant reference cell samples and a measure for their metastatic and/or invasive potential. Interpolation between data points for each reference sample will allow that a measured value of electric activity can be translated into a measure of metastatic and/or invasive potential. In other words, the recorded electrical activity is compared to electrical activities from each of a plurality of reference cell samples in order to allow a determination of the metastatic and/or invasive potential of the malignant neoplasm being tested. The electrical activity used in the analysis can for instance be one or more of amplitude, duration/width, frequency, number, shape, or pattern of spikes of electric current or membrane potential. For instance, as shown herein malignant metastasizing cells exhibit an RTS noise power spectral density having a Lorentzian pattern, meaning that inclusion of a measurement of RTS noise appears and its spectral density would be relevant.
It is also possible to include more complex data sets from the reference samples, i.e. more than one of the above listed possible electrical activities. In such a case the standard curve can be established e.g. via multivariable regression analysis (i.e. multivariate regression analysis, with only one dependent variable and several independent variables - in this case the metastatic and/or invasive potential is the dependent variable and various measures of electrical activity are the independent variables). In order to deduce the metastatic potential, the measured electrical values are then applied to the formula for the regression analysis to arrive at the score value.
In its simplest form, only one reference sample is used - typically from a highly or moderately metastasizing neoplasm. Since a cell having zero metastatic potential will have a negligible (zero) electrical activity, the data point corresponding to the origin of the axes in the coordinate system will constitute an artificial reference sample point for a reference sample from a cell population with no metastatic and/or invasive potential. However the reference cell samples are normally at least a cell sample from a highly metastasizing cancer and a cell sample from a non-metastatic or low-metastasizing cancer, preferably a cancer of the same tissue origin and histological origin; the latter ensures that the correlation between electric activity and metastatic/invasive potential is based on cells that otherwise are comparable, thus minimizing the risk that inclusion of cells of different origins could provide unreliable results.
In particular important embodiments, the malignant neoplasm is a breast cancer and, in that case, useful and important reference cell samples include or consist of MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cells.
However, any malignant neoplasm — typically a solid tumour — could constitute the neoplasm subjected to the method of the first aspect of the invention. Hence other malignant neoplasms are selected from the group consisting of an epithelial tumour, a non-epithelial tumour, and a mixed tumour. The epithelial tumour may be both a carcinoma or an adenocarcinoma, and the non-epithelial tumour or mixed tumour is typically a liposarcoma, a fibrosarcoma, a chondrosarcoma, an osteosarcoma, a leiomyosarcoma, a rhabomyosarcoma, a glioma, a neuroblastoma, a medullablastoma, a malignant melanoma, a malignant meningioma, a neurofibrosarcoma, a leukemia, a myeloproleferative disorder, a lymphoma, a hemangiosarcoma, a Kaposi’s sarcoma, a malignant teratoma, a dysgerminoma, a seminoma, or a choriosarcoma. Also, the anatomic location of the malignant neoplasm can be anywhere in body. So malignant neoplasm may be a of the eye, the nose, the mouth, the tongue, the pharynx, the oesophagus, the stomach, the colon, the rectum, the bladder, the ureter, the urethra, the kidney, the liver, the pancreas, the thyroid gland, the adrenal gland, the breast, the skin, the central nervous system, the peripheral nervous system, the meninges, the vascular system, the testes, the ovaries, the uterus, the uterine cervix, the spleen, bone, or of cartilage.
The method of the first aspect typically entails that the electrical activity is measured by recording electric currents and/or potentials with a multi-electrode array capable of measuring low-frequency electrical events in the sample, such as events with a frequency <1 kHz.
The technical challenge involved in measuring electric activity of cancer cells is that the membrane currents associated with VGSC activity in cancer cells possess amplitudes which are orders of magnitude smaller compared to those observed in neurons. Commercially available electrophysiology systems such as multi-electrode arrays (MEAs) comprise a high-density array of electrodes that are either planar or three-dimensional, with a diameter ranging between 10-100 µm typically embedded on top of an insulating MEA substrate (Spira and Hai, 2013). This set-up allows for neuronal cells to adhere and their electrical activity readily recorded and modulated.
However, the size of the electrodes from such devices contributes towards debilitatingly high impedances and the monitoring window is set in the kHz range where neuronal firing typically occurs. Low-frequency events are therefore filtered out. According to the present invention and to overcome these drawbacks and technical challenges, a sensitive detection method was utilised based on large electrodes, with areas in the order of mm2. These low-impedance electrodes make use of a large Helmholtz-Gouy-Chapman double-layer capacitance. The double layer acts as a multiplication factor to the displacement current produced by cells adhered on the electrode surface, allowing for small-amplitude signals to be detected (Rocha et al., 2016a; Rocha et al., 2016b; Cabello et al., 2019).
Herein is demonstrated that the strongly metastatic BCa cells can be electrically monitored using this sensitive electrode system. The recordings from MDA-MB-231 cells revealed the presence of asynchronous spikes with magnitudes ranging from 40 pA to 140 pA. The electrical activity of MDA-MB-231 cells significantly surpasses the attenuated electrical activity of the weakly metastatic cell line, MCF-7. By using the highly specific pharmacological inhibitor TTX it was demonstrated that the asynchronous spikes are primarily caused by the opening and closing of the VGSCs, in direct agreement with VGSC expression occurring specifically in BCa cells of strong metastatic potential (Fraser et al., 2005). In addition, sporadic occurrence of “Random Telegraph Signal” (RTS) noise was noted. RTS patterns were less frequent than the asynchronous VGSC signals. Characterisation of the RTS noise revealed the presence of a low-frequency signal across the cell cohort with propagation speeds of the same order as those reported for intercellular “Ca2+ waves” (Rizaner et al., 2016). These findings suggest that the electrical activity recorded from the MDA-MB-231 cells is a metastatic phenomenon. The recording system enables the real time investigation of the bioelectricity of BCa cells and corroborant cohort signalling.
Therefore, in all embodiments disclosed herein where the electrical activity of a sample of cells is recorded, it is preferred that a low-impedance MEA device is used and the teachings from Rocha et al., 2016a, Rocha et al., 2016b, and Cabello et al., 2019 in relation to the measurement device can be applied to the present invention. Hence the electrodes of the multi-electrode array each have preferred contact areas >1 mm2, such as about 2 mm2.
Preferably the electrodes are covered by or made from an inert material such as gold, platinum, and rhodium, thus providing for an “inert electrode” which is not electrochemically active but merely transport electric charge.
During the recording of the electric activity, it is preferred that the cells of the sample adhere to the electrode. To achieve this goal, the electrode is typically treated with a substance that facilitates cell adherence. Such substances are known in the art - examples are poly-L-lysine, fibronectin, laminin, and collagen. Regardless of the means used for this purpose, it is preferred that the cells of the sample form a confluent layer across the electrodes during recording.
As shown in the examples, the predominant electrical activity observed in a highly metastatic cell line was constituted by current/membrane potential spikes from currents in VGSC’s. Since previous research has revealed that metastatic behaviour at least in part can be attributed to expression of VGSC by cancer cells, it is therefore of interest to verify that a broad population of cells from a malignant neoplasm, which according to the method of the first aspect of the invention has a high metastatic potential because they express active VGSCs - this would warrant that the patient is treated with pharmaceutical agents that block VGSCs in order to prevent further metastatic and invasive growth. To achieve this goal, the method of the first aspect can therefore include that multiple recordings are made, wherein some recordings are made in the presence of a VGSC (voltage gated sodium channel) inhibiting agent, such as tetrodotoxin (which is a very effective blocker of VGSCs). In this embodiment, the electrical activity is typically recorded under a plurality of concentrations of the VGSC inhibiting agent and/or the electrical activity is recorded in a period after addition of the VGSC inhibiting agent and/or in a period after the concentration of the VGSC inhibiting agent has been reduced.
This aspect relates to method for classifying the therapeutic potential of an agent or a combination of agents for prevention and/or inhibition of metastasis and/or invasive growth by a malignant neoplasm in a patient, the method comprising determining the metastatic and/or invasive potential of the malignant neoplasm according to the method of the first aspect of the invention and any embodiment thereof 1) in the absence of the agent or combination of agents and 2) where the agent or combination of agents is or has been added, wherein the agent or combination of agents is classified as having a therapeutic potential for treatment of the patient if it decreases the assigned score for metastatic and/or invasive potential in an in vivo acceptable concentration.
Put in simpler terms, this aspect relates to identification of a drug or drug combination, which is effective in treating the individual patient based on the metastatic/invasive potential of the patient’s cancer AND on the efficacy of the tested drug in reducing the electric activity of the cancer cells and thereby reduce the metastatic/invasive potential of the cancer. Typical effective drugs in that respect are the VGSC blockers described herein as effective pharmaceuticals, cf. above, but any drug or drug combination that passes the test of being able to reduce the electric activity will be considered useful in treatment.
Combination drugs are preferably at least one VGSC blocker and a potassium channel opener, cf. the disclosure in European Patent Application Number 19205075.5. Suitable potassium channel openers in such a combination with a VGSC blocker are selected from the group consisting of Minoxidil (6-(1-Piperidinyl)pyrimidine-2,4-diamine 3-oxide), Amiloride (3,5-diamino-6-chloro-N-(diaminomethylidene)pyrazine-2-carboxamide), AG1478 (N-(3-chlorophenyl)-6,7-dimethoxy-4-quinazolinamine), Aprikalim, Bimakalim, Cromakalim,, Diazoxide, Emakalim, Levcromakalim, Mazokalim, Naminidil, Nicorandil, Pinacidil, Pilmakalim, Sarakalim, Flufenamic acid, Meclofenamic acid, Niflumic acid, Nimesulide, Rottlerin (mallotoxin), Tolfenamic acid, Lupirtine, Retigabine, and Riluzole.
The method of the 2nd aspect is in a preferred embodiment carried out under hypoxic conditions, cf. the disclosure in WO 2012/049440, which discloses that VGSC blockers are more effective in reducing surrogate measures of metastatic/invasive behaviour under hypoxia.
This aspect is closely related to the 2nd aspect and relates to a method for treatment of a patient, such as a human patient, of a malignant neoplasm, the method comprising obtaining a sample of cells from the malignant neoplasm, classifying at least one agent or combination of agents vis-à-vis the sample according to the of the 2nd aspect of the invention and any embodiment thereof, and subsequently administering to the patient at least one of said agent or combination of agents that are classified as having a therapeutic potential by the method of the 2nd aspect. Consequently, the method relates to personalized medicine, where the patient’s tumour is “typed” relative to its metastatic/invasive potential, and where drug(s) is/are identified that will reduce the metastatic/invasive potential as evidenced by its/their ability to reduce the electric activity - this/these drugs are then used in the subsequent treatment of the patient.
In some embodiments, the treatment is combined with treatment with another anti-cancer drug, such as a cytostatic drug, a hormone blocker or checkpoint inhibitor. Such drugs could include Gefitinib, Tamoxifen, Letrozole, Flutamide, Nivolumab, Pembrolizumab.
In the event the at least one agent is or comprises a VGSC blocker, the treatment can in preferred embodiments entail combination with a potassium channel opener, e.g. one of those potassium channel openers listed above.
The aspect to some degree overlaps with the 3rd aspect and its embodiments and relates to a method for treatment of a patient, such as a human patient, of a malignant neoplasm, the method comprising administering an effective (and pharmaceutically acceptable) amount of an agent that reduces VGSC current, in particular the transient VGSC current, to the patient, wherein the effective amount is non-lethal to the cells of the malignant neoplasm and reduces or blocks invasive and/or metastatic growth of the cells of the malignant neoplasm, and wherein the metastatic and/or invasive potential of the cells of the patient’s malignant neoplasm has been determined according to the method of the first aspect of the invention as described above under the Summary of the Invention. In addition, the agent that reduces VGSC current can also be tested in the method of the 2nd aspect and its embodiments in order to verify that it will indeed reduce the metastatic/invasive potential of the malignant neoplasm.
The rationale behind the 4th aspect is that the demonstration that the electrical activity can be reduced by applying a VGSC blocker in the method of the 1st aspect demonstrates that the malignant cells are sensitive to VGSC blocking in general. By also adding on the method of the 2nd aspect, a further verification is provided.
The agent administered can be any of the above-mentioned VGSC blockers that are pharmaceutically effective. The effective amount is in preferred embodiments non-lethal to the cells of the malignant neoplasm while reducing or blocking invasive and/or metastatic growth of the cells of the malignant neoplasm, see also WO 2012/049440.
Also, combination treatment with any one of the potassium channel openers disclosed above is considered an embodiment of the 4th aspect of the invention.
Electrophysiology of population of cancer cells in vitro
The MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cells were cultured in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM; Sigma) containing 5% v/v foetal bovine serum (FBS; Gibco) and 4 mM L-Glutamine (Sigma). The cells were harvested once a confluence of 70% or over was achieved. The cells were washed with phosphate buffered saline (PBS; Sigma) and dissociated using 0.05% Trypsin-EDTA solution (Sigma) at 37° C. for 3 minutes. A cell density of 1×106 cells/ml was deposited on the device for each experiment. Images were acquired using either an M205 Leica stereo microscope (cells on electrodes) or a Leica DMIRB microscope fitted with a Nikon DXM1200C digital camera.
The trypan blue exclusion assay was used to determine viability of cells plated on MEAs compared to the tissue culture dish (Fraser et al., 2005). Briefly, a MEA was placed in a 35 mm tissue culture dish (Falcon) and pre-treated for 20 min with 0.01 mg/ml poly-L-lysine (Sigma) to promote cell adhesion. Cells were plated at a density of 1×106 cells/ml and allowed to attach overnight. The media was then replaced with 0.1% trypan blue solution. Following incubation for 10 min at 37° C., the trypan blue solution was replaced with 1 ml fresh cell culture medium and the cells were viewed at 100× magnification under a dissection microscope (Vickers Instruments). The percentage of dead cells was determined from 30 randomly selected fields of view for either the MEA or the dish. This procedure was repeated in 4 independent experiments.
The MEA device consisted of a silicon dioxide substrate onto which four pairs of circular electrodes were deposited, each with an area of 2 mm2. This was achieved by evaporating a 10 nm layer of chromium followed by a 50 nm layer of gold through a shadow mask with the desired electrode design. The electrodes were connected to measurement pads at the edges of the device through strip lines of negligible area. In order to contain the culture medium and cells over the electrodes, a previously manufactured Poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) well was secured onto the MEA before plating the cells.
The MEA was then further enclosed in an autoclaved container and the electrodes covered in 0.01 mg/ml poly-L-lysine (Sigma) to promote cell adhesion. This was applied and left for 5 minutes, washed three times with MilliQ water and left to stand for 1.5 hours prior to depositing the cells. Measurements started at least one hour after the cell seeding.
The container with the seeded MEA was kept in an incubator (Midi 40; Thermo Scientific) at 37° C. and 5% CO2 and connected to low-noise cables to perform the electrical measurements. The current between the 2 mm2 electrode pair was measured using a low-noise current amplifier (SR570; Stanford Research) with an amplification factor of 10 nA/V. This data was then plotted using a dynamic signal analyser (35670A; Agilent) and LabVIEW software connected via a high speed GPIB interface. The instrumentation was further contained within a Faraday cage and connected with low-noise cables to minimise external interference.
To determine the origin of the electrical activity and following prior research relating to the role of VGSCs in metastasis (Fraser et al., 2005; Chioni et al., 2009), a highly specific VGSC inhibitor, TTX (Alomone Labs), was applied to the cells in culture. Three experiments were conducted using 20 µM, following the reported value of TTX toxicity in earlier studies (Fraser et al., 2005). For these experiments, 2 µl of 10 mM TTX was combined with 20 µl of the culture medium on the MEA and the mixture reintroduced into the system, obtain final concentrations of 20 µM of TTX in 1 ml volume on the chip. This was left for an hour and the recording of the electrical current of the cell cohort was continued. Finally, the MEA was washed thrice with fresh medium at 37° C. The recovery of the ensuing electrical behaviour was seen shortly after washing the TTX out and monitored over an additional 24 hours.
where T≅RCCD and corresponds to the time constant for the charging and discharging of the network. CD acts as a multiplication factor and is dependent on the electrode area. The spatial resolution is considerably reduced due to the large electrode area. The measured current signal is the sum of each individual cell’s contribution on the electrode surface. Under the culture conditions used, the MDA-MB-231 cells maintained their familiar mesenchymal phenotype (see
The bioelectricity of the MDA-MB-231 cell populations was recorded over time, for up to 72 hours. All electrical recordings were repeated in three independent experiments. Prior to introducing the cells, the baseline current seen using only cell culture medium on gold (Au) electrodes coated with Poly-L-Lysine was about 0.5 pA, as shown in
In order to demonstrate the dependence of electrical activity on the presence of functional VGSCs, cells were treated with the neurotoxin TTX (
Following the addition of TTX, this electrical activity decreased, with currents reaching up to 20 pA (
RTS noise can be characterised in terms of its “up” and “down” time. The “up” time refers to the duration of time when the square pulse is above the baseline level. The “down” time refers to the duration of time when the square pulse has returned to and remains at the baseline level. Two-level RTS is defined as a Lorentzian spectrum in the frequency domain (Machlup, 1954). The Lorentzian spectrum gives the frequency above which the spectrum rolls-off as f-2, conditioning the harmonic mean of both times, “up” and “down”. When the RTS amplitude is sufficiently higher than the background noise, the Lorentzian spectrum can be used to estimate both time constants (Kolhatkar et al., 2003). A theoretical current PSD can also be derived from a 2-level signal as follows (Machlup, 1954):
where ω = 2πf is the angular frequency and ∂I is the amplitude of the current pulses.
The second electrical pattern revealed a wide square pulse shape as depicted in
The RTS shape can be explained as an extracellular travelling 241 wave across the large area electrode.
Considering the electrode area and duration of each pulse, it is possible to calculate the distance travelled by the signal and hence the wave speed. When a wave enters the measurement electrode, the potential increases relative to the counter electrode, resulting in an induced displacement current through the double layer capacitance. This appears as an increase in current in the electrical measurements and once the wave has left the measurement electrode, the current decreases back to its original level (Rocha et al., 2016a; Cabello et al., 2019). The “up” states shown in the inset of
The present experiments have revealed, for the first time, the extracellular electrical activity produced by MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cells, which was recorded using highly sensitive MEAs comprising gold electrodes with an area of 2 mm2. It was found that the strongly metastatic MDA-MB-231 cells are electrically active with spontaneous spiking, whilst the MCF-7 cells showed only very low-level electrical excitability. This is consistent with MDA-MB-231 cells being electrically excitable in line with their metastatic ability (Djamgoz, 2011; Djamgoz et al., 2014). The electrical behaviour of MDA-MB-231 cells reveal an asynchronous pattern identified primarily as the product of their VGSC activity, as demonstrated by the TTX experiments. A slower signal pattern was also occasionally observed with similar characteristics to that of RTS noise. The calculated wave speed for the RTS pattern was in agreement with previously reported values for intercellular Ca2+ waves. Ion channels involved in cell migration would be expected to regulate intracellular Ca2+ signalling, most likely coupling extracellular stimuli to cell migration. Therefore, this work demonstrated the possibility using non-invasive, highly sensitive transducer devices to examine and pinpoint the origin of the electrical behaviour of cancer cells.
It is envisaged that in the future, it will be possible to use the sensor platform to investigate the pharmacological properties and action of drugs on cancer cell ensembles in a clinical setting.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20161801.4 | Mar 2020 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2021/055858 | 3/9/2021 | WO |