NZ613971B2 - Apparatus and method for isolating leukocytes and tumor cells by filtration - Google Patents
Apparatus and method for isolating leukocytes and tumor cells by filtration Download PDFInfo
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- NZ613971B2 NZ613971B2 NZ613971A NZ61397112A NZ613971B2 NZ 613971 B2 NZ613971 B2 NZ 613971B2 NZ 613971 A NZ613971 A NZ 613971A NZ 61397112 A NZ61397112 A NZ 61397112A NZ 613971 B2 NZ613971 B2 NZ 613971B2
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Classifications
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M1/00—Suction or pumping devices for medical purposes; Devices for carrying-off, for treatment of, or for carrying-over, body-liquids; Drainage systems
- A61M1/02—Blood transfusion apparatus
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M1/00—Suction or pumping devices for medical purposes; Devices for carrying-off, for treatment of, or for carrying-over, body-liquids; Drainage systems
- A61M1/02—Blood transfusion apparatus
- A61M1/029—Separating blood components present in distinct layers in a container, not otherwise provided for
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M1/00—Suction or pumping devices for medical purposes; Devices for carrying-off, for treatment of, or for carrying-over, body-liquids; Drainage systems
- A61M1/34—Filtering material out of the blood by passing it through a membrane, i.e. hemofiltration or diafiltration
- A61M1/3496—Plasmapheresis; Leucopheresis; Lymphopheresis
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M1/00—Suction or pumping devices for medical purposes; Devices for carrying-off, for treatment of, or for carrying-over, body-liquids; Drainage systems
- A61M1/36—Other treatment of blood in a by-pass of the natural circulatory system, e.g. temperature adaptation, irradiation ; Extra-corporeal blood circuits
- A61M1/3621—Extra-corporeal blood circuits
- A61M1/3627—Degassing devices; Buffer reservoirs; Drip chambers; Blood filters
- A61M1/3633—Blood component filters, e.g. leukocyte filters
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61M—DEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
- A61M2202/00—Special media to be introduced, removed or treated
- A61M2202/04—Liquids
- A61M2202/0413—Blood
- A61M2202/0439—White blood cells; Leucocytes
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01L—CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL LABORATORY APPARATUS FOR GENERAL USE
- B01L2300/00—Additional constructional details
- B01L2300/04—Closures and closing means
- B01L2300/046—Function or devices integrated in the closure
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01L—CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL LABORATORY APPARATUS FOR GENERAL USE
- B01L2300/00—Additional constructional details
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01L—CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL LABORATORY APPARATUS FOR GENERAL USE
- B01L3/00—Containers or dishes for laboratory use, e.g. laboratory glassware; Droppers
- B01L3/50—Containers for the purpose of retaining a material to be analysed, e.g. test tubes
- B01L3/502—Containers for the purpose of retaining a material to be analysed, e.g. test tubes with fluid transport, e.g. in multi-compartment structures
- B01L3/5021—Test tubes specially adapted for centrifugation purposes
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N1/00—Sampling; Preparing specimens for investigation
- G01N1/28—Preparing specimens for investigation including physical details of (bio-)chemical methods covered elsewhere, e.g. G01N33/50, C12Q
- G01N1/40—Concentrating samples
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- G—PHYSICS
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- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
- G01N1/00—Sampling; Preparing specimens for investigation
- G01N1/28—Preparing specimens for investigation including physical details of (bio-)chemical methods covered elsewhere, e.g. G01N33/50, C12Q
- G01N1/40—Concentrating samples
- G01N1/4077—Concentrating samples by other techniques involving separation of suspended solids
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- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01N—INVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
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- G01N33/48—Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
- G01N33/483—Physical analysis of biological material
- G01N33/487—Physical analysis of biological material of liquid biological material
- G01N33/49—Blood
- G01N33/491—Blood by separating the blood components
Abstract
Disclosed is an apparatus for isolating and separating leukocytes from red blood cells in a whole blood sample, the apparatus comprising: a filtration device comprising an upper chamber, which is a cylindrical tube, a lower chamber, which is a cylindrical tube, and one or more stacked filter membranes between the upper and lower chambers, wherein the one or more stacked filter membranes are capable of retaining the leukocytes, wherein the inner diameters of the upper and lower chambers are similar as to create a cylindrical tube which allows liquids to pass there through, wherein the one or more stacked filter membranes is placed between screw threads of the upper chamber and lower chamber, which chambers are securely attached together; and a collection tube for collecting red blood cells from the whole blood sample, wherein the filtration device is placed on top of the collection tube, and wherein the red blood cells are separated from the leukocytes and collected in the collection tube following centrifugation. Also disclosed is a method for preparing a lysate of leukocytes from a whole blood sample by use of the apparatus. ranes between the upper and lower chambers, wherein the one or more stacked filter membranes are capable of retaining the leukocytes, wherein the inner diameters of the upper and lower chambers are similar as to create a cylindrical tube which allows liquids to pass there through, wherein the one or more stacked filter membranes is placed between screw threads of the upper chamber and lower chamber, which chambers are securely attached together; and a collection tube for collecting red blood cells from the whole blood sample, wherein the filtration device is placed on top of the collection tube, and wherein the red blood cells are separated from the leukocytes and collected in the collection tube following centrifugation. Also disclosed is a method for preparing a lysate of leukocytes from a whole blood sample by use of the apparatus.
Description
APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR ISOLATING YTES AND
TUMOR CELLS BY FILTRATION
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present application claims priority to US. Provisional Patent Application Nos.
61/444,044, filed February 17, 2011 and 61/489,998, filed May 25, 2011, the disclosures of
which are are herein incorporated by reference in their entireties for all purposes.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States. There is an ever-
growing need for accurate analysis of oncogenic markers for the diagnosis and prognosis of
cancer. For example, detection of an array of nic markers may allow physicians to
detect early stage cancer and to monitor cancer progression. With knowledge of a patient’s
responsiveness to anticancer ies prior to drug initiation, physicians could select the best
course of treatment for each dual t. Furthermore, routine analysis of drug
effectiveness during the course of treatment may reveal a patient’s unresponsiveness to
specific ancer drugs. This information could be used to improve the selection of drug
treatment regimens.
Current methods for oncogenic marker analysis are based on interrogating
malignant cells in a heterogeneous mixture of normal and cancer cells such as whole blood.
Methods such as the LeukoLOCK Total RNA ion System (Ambion)capture circulating
malignant cells fiom whole blood by passing a blood sample through disposable yte
depletion filters. Typically, these depletion filters are flushed with buffers such as PBS as the
malignant cells are recovered. This wash step changes the intracellular tration of
anticancer drugs previously exposed to the cells, thereby possibly g de novo ing
responses within the cells and altering expression of oncogenic markers. Consequently,
expression of oncogenic markers in the analyzed sample could inaccurately reflect a patient’s
response to specific anticancer therapies. This could lead to incorrect diagnostic and/or
prognostic evaluations. The present invention overcomes this potential source of error by
providing s and apparatuses for ing a subset of blood cells without changing the
intracellular concentration of an anticancer drug.
[0003a] Any discussion of the prior art throughout the specification should in no way be
considered as an admission that such prior art is widely known or forms part of common
general knowledge in the field.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0003b] According to a first aspect, the present invention relates to an apparatus for ing
and separating leukocytes from red blood cells in a whole blood sample, said apparatus
comprising:
a filtration device comprising an upper chamber, which is a cylindrical tube, a lower
r, which is a cylindrical tube, and one or more stacked filter membranes between said
upper and lower chambers, n said one or more stacked filter nes are capable of
retaining said leukocytes, wherein the inner diameters of the upper and lower chambers are
similar as to create a rical tube which allows liquids to pass therethrough, wherein said
one or more stacked filter nes is placed between screw threads of the upper chamber
and lower chamber, which rs are securely attached together; and
a collection tube for collecting red blood cells from said whole blood sample, wherein
said filtration device is placed on top of said collection tube, and wherein said red blood cells
are separated from said leukocytes and collected in said collection tube following
centrifugation.
[0003c] According to a second aspect, the present ion relates to a method for preparing a
lysate of leukocytes from a whole blood sample without ntial dilution of a therapeutic
agent, said method comprising the following steps:
(a) g said whole blood sample into an apparatus according to the invention;
(b) centrifuging said apparatus to capture said leukocytes on said one or more stacked
filter membranes and to separate said red blood cells into said collection tube; and
(c) lysing said leukocytes captured on said one or more stacked filter membranes
with lysis buffer but without a wash step between steps (b) and (c) to thereby prepare
a lysate of leukocytes.
[0003d] ing to a third aspect, the present invention relates to a lysate of leukocytes when
prepared according to a method of the second aspect.
[0003e] Unless the context clearly es otherwise, throughout the ption and the
claims, the words “comprise”, ising”, and the like are to be construed in an inclusive
sense as opposed to an exclusive or exhaustive sense; that is to say, in the sense of “including,
but not limited to”.
The present invention provides apparatuses and methods for isolating, harvesting,
and/or ring a subset of blood cells such as normal ytes, diseased leukocytes,
malignant leukocytes, leukemia cells, foam cells, and/or circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from a
blood sample by filtration without changing the intracellular (in vivo) concentration of a
therapeutic agent i.e., anticancer drug (e.g., a tyrosine kinase tor). In certain s, the
present invention provides cell isolation apparatuses comprising a filtration device and a
collection tube.
In one aspect, the present invention es an apparatus for isolating and separating
leukocytes from red blood cells in a whole blood sample, the apparatus comprising:
a tion device comprising an upper chamber, a lower chamber, and one or
more stacked filter membranes between the upper and lower chambers, wherein the one or
more stacked filter membranes are capable of retaining the leukocytes; and
a collection tube for collecting the red blood cells from the whole blood sample,
wherein the filtration device is placed on top of the tion tube, and wherein the red blood
cells are separated from the leukocytes and are collected in the collection tube following
centrifugation. In a preferred aspect, the lower chamber is disposed between the upper chamber
and the collection tube.
In another ment, the present invention provides a method for preparing a lysate
of leukocytes from a whole blood sample without substantial dilution of a therapeutic agent
(e.g., an anticancer drug), the method comprising:
(a) loading the whole blood sample into a cell isolation (filtration) apparatus
such as an apparatus as described herein;
(b) centrifuging the apparatus to capture the leukocytes on the one or more
stacked filter nes to separate red blood cells into a collection tube; and
- 2a -
(c) lysing the leukocytes captured on the one or more stacked filter membranes
with lysis buffer but without a wash step n steps (b) and (c) to thereby prepare a lysate of
leukocytes.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a method for monitoring the efficacy
of an ncer drug in a subject, wherein the subject has a hematological malignancy,
comprising:
- 2b -
administering the anticancer drug to the subject, wherein the first
administration of the anticancer drug is at time T1;
measuring the activation state and or expression level of BCR-ABL at a time
T2 in a sample from the subject; and
determining a course of treatment based upon the activation state and or
expression level of L.
In n embodiments, the method further comprises measuring the tion state
of BCR-ABL at T0, i.e., prior to the first administration of the anticancer drug. In certain
instances, the hematological malignancy is a lymphoma or a leukemia such as chronic
myelogenous leukemia (CML). The time difference between T1 and T2 is about 1 week to
about 6 months such as l, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, ll, 12, l3, 14, 15, l6, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
22, 23, or 24 week(s). The time difference n To and T1 is about 1 day to about 3
weeks. In certain other aspects, the methods further include measuring sion and or
activation levels of at least one other signal transduction molecule such as CRKL, AKT,
STATS and SRC.
In certain aspects, the course of treatment is selected from changing the anticancer
drug dose, changing the anti-cancer drug, including an additional anticancer drug, changing
the length of ent and staying the existing course of treatment.
In certain aspects, the sample comprises an extract of isolated cells. In certain
aspects, the isolated cells are incubated in vitro with at least one anticancer drug (e.g., 2
anticancer drugs) at T0 (prior to initiation of treatment). In other ces, the isolated cells
are incubated in vitro with at least two anticancer drugs at T2, prior to determining the course
of treatment.
In yet another embodiment, the t invention es a method for selecting an
anticancer drug in a subject having a hematological malignancy:
measuring the activation state level of BCR-ABL in an isolated cell from a
sample from the subject;
incubating the isolated cell with at least one anticancer drug prior to tion
of treatment;
measuring the activation state level of BCR-ABL in the incubated cells; and
selecting a course of treatment based upon the activation state level of BCR-
ABL.
In certain aspects, the course of treatment is selected from the group consisting of
selecting the anticancer drug, selecting the anticancer dose, and determining the length of
treatment. In certain other aspects, the methods further include measuring expression and or
activation levels of at least one other signal transduction molecule such as CRKL, AKT,
STATS and SRC.
As such, the t invention provides: a method for selecting an anticancer drug
in a subject having a hematological malignancy, the method comprising:
1) measuring the tion state level of BCR—ABL in an isolated cell from a
sample from the subject;
2) incubating the ed cell with at least one anticancer drug prior to
initiation of treatment;
3) measuring the activation state level of BCR—ABL in the incubated cells; and
selecting a course of treatment based upon the activation state level of BCR—ABL.
The present ion also provides a method for monitoring the efficacy of an
anticancer drug in a subject, wherein the subject has a logical malignancy, the method
comprising:
a) measuring the activation state of L at T0, prior to the first
administration of the anticancer drug;
b) administering the anticancer drug to the subject, wherein the first
stration of the anticancer drug is at time T1;
c) measuring the activation state and or expression level of BCR-ABL at a
time T2 in a sample from the subject; and
d) determining a course of treatment based upon the activation state and or
expression level of BCR—ABL.
Other objects, es, and advantages of the present invention will be apparent to
one of skill in the art from the following detailed description and figures.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016] illustrates a flow m of one ment of the present invention.
-G illustrate an embodiment cell isolation tus. is an
embodiment of an upper chamber. -C show an upper chamber with cap; -E
is a lower chamber; and -G is a collection tube.
-D illustrate ments of the lower chamber with various filnnel
functionality.
-D illustrate embodiments of the cell isolation apparatus. FIG 4A is an
embodiment of the upper and lower chamber; FIG 4B is an embodiment of the upper and
lower chamber; is an embodiment of a collection tube; and is an
embodiment of an aggregation of an upper chamber, a lower chamber and a collection tube.
[0020] -D illustrates r embodiment of the cell ion apparatus. FIG 5A is
an embodiment of the upper and lower chamber; FIG 5B is an embodiment of the upper and
lower chamber with cap; is an embodiment of a collection tube with cap; and is an embodiment of a lower r and funnel.
-C illustrate yet another embodiment of the cell isolation apparatus. FIG 6A
is an ment of the upper and lower chamber; FIG 6B is an embodiment of the upper
and lower chamber with a middle sleeve; is an embodiment of a lower chamber.
-B illustrate that both total and phosphorylated BCR-ABL can be detected
and measured in cell lysates prepared from K562 cells by filtration. The levels of total BCR-
ABL in cells following filtration are similar to levels observed in red samples.
Additionally, shows the levels of phosphorylated BCR-ABL in K562 cells after
filtration are comparable to the levels detected in unprocessed cells.
-B illustrates that both total () and phosphorylated BCR-ABL levels
() can be detected and measured in cell s, wherein the cell lysates are prepared
from blood samples spiked with K562 cells, filtered through filtration membranes, and
analyzed by microarray such as the proximity-mediated immunoassay described herein. shows that the percentage recovery of total and phosphorylated BCR-ABL in different
samples that were centrifuged at various speeds can be compared. The highest percentage of
phospho-BCR—ABL (63.60%) and total BCR-ABL 5%) signal recovered was from
using PALL filtration membrane and centrifuging at .
[0024] -B illustrates that phosphorylated BCR—ABL levels (A) can be ed and
measured in cell lysates prepared from blood samples spiked with varying amounts of K562
cells, filtered through ion membranes, and analyzed by microarray such as the
proximity-mediated immunoassay bed herein. The methods of the present invention
can be used to detect the levels of phospho-BCR-ABL in samples spiked with K562 cells. In
particular, the measured levels of phosphorylated BCR-ABL relate to the number of K562
cells added to the blood samples. shows total BCR-ABL ry.
tes patients analyzed in one embodiment of the invention. Patient 1
has active CML and has been receiving treatment since December 2006. Patient 2 who also
has active CML has been receiving imatinib treatment since January.
A-B illustrates that Patient 1 (A) has a lower amount ofphospho-BCR-ABL
per ml (e. g., 10,979 CU/ml i 1,245 CU/ml) of blood as compared to Patient 2 (e.g., 185,934
CU/ml i 11,019 CU/ml) (B), ting that Patient 1 is ding to imatinib treatment.
The values were determined without subtracting the blood ound.
A-B show the detection of activated (phosphorylated) levels of BCR-ABL
as determined by methods described . Cell lysate samples isolated from Patient 1 were
diluted 1:5 and 1:20 according to the methods described in Example 6. The standard sample
represents untreated K562 cell lysates with varying # of cells per 80 ul of lysate (e. g, 10000,
3000, 1000, 300, 100, 30, 10, or 0 cells / 80 ul). The top panel ofA shows the images
of the BCR-ABL CEER Assays.
A-B shows that in vitro ent with imatinib of blood sample from
Patient 1 dramatically decreased the amount of phosphorylated BCR—ABL, as compared to
nilotinib treatment. A shows the images of the BCR-ABL CEER Assays.
shows that activated BCR-ABL levels in Patient 1’s blood sample change
when treated with increasing amounts of BCR-ABL tor (e.g., imatinib or nilotinib).
Different drug concentrations were incubated with Patient 1’s blood sample for 1.5 hours at
37°C. The mean CU value after luM imatinib treatment was 26, and 110 after 0.1uM
imatinib treatment. The top panel of shows the images of the L CEER
Assays.
A-B show that imatinib is more effective than nilotinib at reducing activated
BCR-ABL protein in Patient 1’s blood sample. The bar graphs show that luM imatinib
treatment decreased activated BCR-ABL levels (A) as compared to the untreated sample.
B is after subtraction of blood background.
A-D illustratesthe pathway profile of other orlyated signaling
transduction pathway components such as CRKL (A), AKT (B), STAT5 (C) and SRC (D). It
shows nib therapy can reduce the levels of activated AKT, STAT4 and SRC in t
1’s blood sample. In vitro treatment of Patient ‘s blood samples with 1 uM nib was
more effective than either 10uM imatinib or 10uM nilotinib.
shows that Patient 1’s blood sample contains very high levels of total BCR
(about 8,000,000 CU/ml).
A-B illustrate that nilotinib is more effective compared to imatinib at
decreasing activated BCR-ABL levels in in vitro-treated blood samples from Patient 2. A shows that in vitro incubation of Patient 2’s blood sample with 10uM nilotinib was the
most effective treatment at reducing the % ry of phospho BCR-ABL signal.
Phosphorylated BCR-ABL levels were detected and measured following an in vitro ent
of patient blood samples with different dosages of L tors for 1.5 hours at 37°C.
B shows that increasing dosages of nilotinib decreases activated BCR-ABL while
imatinib has no effect on Patient 2’s blood sample. The % recovery of phospho BCR-ABL
signal decreased to 39.35% with 10uM nilotinib, and only 96.46% with 10uM imatinib.
[0034] A-D show that in vitro treatment of Patient 2’s blood sample with dasatinib
can reduce the levels of activated CRKL (A), AKT (B), STATS (C) and SRC (D). On the
other hand, similar treatment with either imatinib or nilotinib treatment reduces only
phosphorylated AKT.
A-D show that phosphorylated CRKL levels can be detected and ed
in several patients’ blood s that were also treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in
vitro. BCR-ABL inhibitors such as imatinib and nilotinib can reduce CRKL levels only in
blood samples from Patient 1, and not Patient 2. A-B show that phospho CRKL level
(CU/ml of blood) sed in Patient 1 samples in vitro treated with either 10uM imatinib or
10uM nilotinib, as ed to the non-treated . Similarly, C-D show that in
Patient 1 samples, the percentage of phospho CRKL signal decreased upon in vitro ent.
A similar response was not seen in Patient 2 samples.
A-D illustrates that Patient 1 and Patient 2 do not similarly respond to
imatinib and nilotinib. Activated AKT increased in samples from Patient 1 following
imatinib treatment, and yet they decreased in s from Patient 2. In response to
nilotinib, AKT levels remain mostly unchanged in samples from Patient 1 as compared to
non-treated samples, and they greatly decrease in samples from Patient 2. A-B show
the results as calculated as picograms of activated AKT per 1000 cells assayed. C-D
2012/025491
shows the results as determined as a percentage ofAKT signal recovered from the CEER
Assay.
A-B show activated STATS profiles of in vitro-treated blood samples from
Patient 1 (A) and Patient 2 (B). Dasatinib treatment decreased phospho-STATS levels in
samples from Patient 1 and 2. Imatinib or nilotinib ent did not change activated
STATS to the same extent.
A-D show that samples from both Patient 1 and 2 have lower levels of
phospho-SRC in response to imatinib, nilotinib and dasatinib. A-B illustrate
phospho-SRC levels as calculated as picograms per 1000 cells assayed. C-D
illustrate phospho SRC levels as a percentage of phospho SRC signal recovered.
represents a list of ts who participated in this study. The patients were
diagnosed with CML and received targeted treatment. In vivo modulations of BCR-ABL
tion via CEER Assay were monitored in these patients
represents a list of some patients who participated in this study. An asterisk
indicates a blood sample that was processed using the tube embodiment of the cell isolation
apparatus of the present invention. The other blood s were processed using the 96-
well embodiment.
illustrates the expression level of BCR-ABL, BCR and ABL in a blood
sample from a normal, healthy subject.
[0042] A-B illustrate the ted BCR-ABL levels of Patients 1 (A) and 7 (B) at
multiple time points. WBC = white blood cell. pBCR-ABL= phospho-BCR—ABL. tBCR-
ABL= total BCR-ABL. %P/T = phospho-BCR—ABL/tBCR—ABL in percentage.
A-C illustrate the BCR-ABL profile of t 2 at multiple time .
A shows that the pBCR-ABL/WBC ratio d in the blood drawn on 5/ l l and was
increasing by lO/ 12. An asterisk indicates that the pBCR-ABL data was lied by 10 to
make the value visible on the graph. B shows that the pBCR-ABL/total BCR-ABL
ratio was lowest on 5/ l 1. C shows results of quantitative RT-PCR analysis using the
MolecularMD kit for BCR-ABL and low levels ofmRNA. The percentage of BCR-
ABL/ABL varies with the amount ofmRNA present in the sample.
[0044] A-B illustrate the WBC count and pBCR—ABL/WBC ratio of Patient 3 at
multiple time points (A). B shows the change in total and activated BCR-ABL levels
and mRNA percentages.
A-B illustrate the total and activated L levels of Patient 8 at
multiple time points (A). B shows the change in total and activated BCR-ABL levels
and mRNA percentages after treatment was changed from imatinib to dasatinib.
lA-B illustrates the total and activated BCR-ABL levels in Patients 14 (B)
and 18 (A) at multiple time points.
A-B shows Patient l4’s response to in vitro treatment of imatinib or
nilotinib. Total and phospho-BCR—ABL levels decreased upon drug ent.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
1. Introduction
The present invention advantageously provides novel apparatuses and methods for
isolating or recovering a subset of blood cells such as normal and/or ant leukocytes,
leukemia cells, foam cells, and/or circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from blood samples by
filtration without changing the intracellular concentration of a therapeutic agent such as an
anticancer drug (e.g, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor such as, e.g., imatinib mesylate (Gleevec®),
nilotinib (Tasigna®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib
(Sutent®), erlotinib (Tarceva®), nib (GW-572016; Tykerb®), canertinib (c1 1033),
semaxinib (SU54l6), vatalanib (PTK787/ZK2225 84), sorafenib (BAY 43-9006; Nexavar®),
leflunomide (SUlOl), vandetanib (ZACTIMATM; ZD6474), ponatinib (AP24534), and
combinations thereof). Contrary to the art, the apparatuses and methods of the present
invention provide cell lysates from recovered cells such as ytes, leukemia cells, foam
cells, and/or circulating tumor cells without substantial on of a eutic agent such as
an anticancer drug (e.g., a tyrosine kinase tor).
The BCR-ABL fusion protein is ated with chronic enous leukemia
(CML) as well as acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In particular, the BCR-ABL protein
is an active tyrosine kinase that is critical to cancer pathogenesis. Although imatinib
ec®) is currently the first line therapy for newly diagnosed patients with CML, about
-25% of patients do not achieve durable te cytogenetic responses. Studies have
shown that the reactivation of BCR-ABL kinase activity in the presence of continued
imatinib treatment is the major cause of resistance. As such, the measurement of L
activity finds y in predicting response to therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as
imatinib as well as in identifying patients who develop resistance to such inhibitors.
In certain embodiments, the apparatuses and methods of the present invention can
be used to isolate or recover cells of interest (e. g., leukocytes, leukemia cells, foam cells,
and/or circulating tumor cells) from a sample such as blood and prepare lysates therefrom,
wherein analytes such as, e.g., BCR-ABL that are present in the resulting cell lysate can be
interrogated for their expression and/or activation levels using an assay such as a
Collaborative Enzyme Enhanced Reactive-immunoassay (CEERT'V') (also known as
Qllaborative Proximity Assay (COPIA)). CEERT'V' is described in the following
patent documents which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all
purposes: PCT Publication No. ; PCT Publication No. ;
PCT ation No. WO 08637; PCT Publication No. ; PCT
Publication No. ; and PCT ation No. , filed
October 20, 2010.
In particular ments, expression/activation profiling of one or more oncogenic
fusion proteins, substrates thereof, and/or other signal uction pathway proteins (e.g.,
BCR-ABL, BCR, ABL, CRKL, JAK2, STATS, Src, FAK, c-ABL, c-CBL, SHC, SHP-2,
VAV, BAP- 1, AKT, SRC, EGFR, HER-2, HER-3, HER-4, VEGFR— 1, VEGFR-2, VEGFR-3,
PDGFR, c-Met, c-KIT, IGF-IR, PI3K, etc.) can be performed on cell s prepared using
the apparatuses and methods of the t invention to determine the efficacy of inhibitor
y for patients with BCR-ABL mediated diseases (e.g., chronic myelogenous leukemia).
In some instances, patients may be receiving tor therapy such as treatment with tyrosine
kinase inhibitors as described herein. In particular instances, leukemia cells are isolated from
blood samples of such patients without substantial dilution of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor. In
certain other instances, the expression/activation profiling of oncogenic fusion proteins
and/or signal uction pathway components in a sample ing in vitro treatment with
tyrosine kinase inhibitors can e le information to enable a clinician to select an
effective therapeutic regimen.
As a non-limiting example, a blood sample from a patient receiving tyrosine kinase
inhibitor therapy can be analyzed to determine the effectiveness of the therapy. The patient’s
blood can be drawn and cells of interest such as leukocytes, leukemia cells, and/or circulating
tumor cells are isolated by filtration using the apparatuses and s of the invention. The
cells are then lysed and interrogated using an assay such as CEERT'V' to determine the effect of
tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment on the activation state and/or total amount of one or a
plurality of oncogenic fusion proteins (e.g., BCR-ABL), substrates thereof (e.g., BCR-ABL
substrates such as CRKL, JAK2, STATS, Src, FAK, c-ABL, c-CBL, SHC, SHP-2, VAV,
and/or BAP-l), and/or other signal transduction molecules. In particular ments, the
number of leukocytes, leukemia cells, and/or circulating tumor cells and the profile of
phosphorylated BCR-ABL and other signaling transduction pathway components can be
determined. The phosphorylation signal ratio can also be ated from the analysis and
used to determine the patient’s prognosis. In particular embodiments, the efficacy of ne
kinase inhibitor therapy can be monitored in a patient by administering a tyrosine kinase
inhibitor at time T1, measuring the activation state and/or expression level of BCR-ABL at a
time T2 in a sample from the patient, and determining a course of treatment based upon the
activation state and/or expression level of BCR—ABL.
[0053] As another non-limiting example, a blood sample from a patient (e.g., not receiVing
tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment) can be in vitro incubated with one or more inhibitors prior
to isolation of leukocytes, leukemia cells and/or circulating tumor cells (CTCs). In particular
instances, whole blood s harvested fiom patients diagnosed with CML are treated with
one or more tyrosine kinase inhibitors (e.g., imatinib, nilotinib, nib, eta). Cells of
interest such as leukemia cells are isolated by filtration using the apparatuses and methods of
the present invention. The cells are then lysed and interrogated using an assay such as, e.g.,
V' to determine the effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment on the activation state
and/or total amount of one or a plurality of oncogenic fusion ns (e.g., BCR—ABL),
substrates thereof (e.g., BCR-ABL substrates such as CRKL, JAK2, STATS, Src, FAK, c-
ABL, c-CBL, SHC, SHP-2, VAV, and/or BAP-l) and/or other signal transduction molecules.
In particular embodiments, a suitable tyrosine kinase inhibitor can be selected for the patient
based upon measuring the activation state or level of BCR-ABL in isolated cells from the
sample, incubating the ed cells with at least one anticancer drug such as one or more
tyrosine kinase inhibitors prior to initiation of treatment, measuring the tion state or
level of BCR—ABL in the ted cells, and ing a course of treatment based upon the
activation state or level of BCR-ABL.
11. Definitions
As used herein, the following terms have the meanings ascribed to them unless
specified otherwise.
[0055] The term “cancer” includes any member of a class of diseases characterized by the
uncontrolled growth of aberrant cells. The term includes all known cancers and neoplastic
conditions, whether characterized as malignant, benign, soft tissue, or solid, and cancers of all
stages and grades ing pre- and post-metastatic s. Non-limiting examples of
different types of cancer include hematological malignancies (e.g., leukemia, lymphoma);
osteogenic sarcomas (e.g., Ewing sarcoma); soft tissue sarcomas (e.g, Dermatof1brosarcoma
Protuberans (DFSP), myosarcoma); other soft tissue malignancies, ary thyroid
carcinomas; prostate cancer; gastric cancer (e.g., stomach); breast cancer; lung cancer (e.g.,
non-small cell lung cancer); digestive and gastrointestinal cancers (e.g., colorectal cancer,
gastrointestinal stromal tumors, gastrointestinal carcinoid tumors, colon cancer, rectal cancer,
anal cancer, bile duct cancer, and small intestine cancer); esophageal cancer; gallbladder
cancer; liver cancer; pancreatic cancer; appendix cancer; n cancer; renal cancer (e.g.,
renal cell carcinoma); cancer of the central nervous system; skin cancer; choriocarcinomas;
and head and neck s. As used , a “tumor” comprises one or more cancerous
cells.
A “hematological malignancy” includes any type of cancer that affects the blood,
bone marrow, and/or lymph nodes. Examples of hematological ancies include, but are
not limited to, leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma. Non-limiting examples of
different kinds of leukemia include chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), acute
lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), acute myelogenous
leukemia (AML), and large granular lymphocytic leukemia. Subtypes of CML include, e.g.,
chronic monocytic leukemia. Subtypes of ALL e, e.g., precursor B-cell acute
lymphoblastic leukemia, pro-B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, sor T-cell acute
lymphoblastic leukemia, and acute biphenotypic leukemia. Subtypes of CLL include, e.g., B-
cell phocytic leukemia. Subtypes ofAML include, e.g., acute promyelocytic
leukemia, acute myeloblastic leukemia, and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia. Examples of
different kinds of lymphoma include, but are not limited to, Hodgkin’s lymphoma (four
subtypes) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma, such as, e.g, small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL),
diffilse large B-cell ma (DLBCL), follicular lymphoma (FL), mantle cell lymphoma
(MCL), hairy cell leukemia (HCL), al zone lymphoma (MZL), Burkitt’s ma
(BL), post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD), T-cell phocytic leukemia
(T-PLL), B-cell prolymphocytic leukemia (B-PLL), Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia (also
known as lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma), and other NK- or T-cell lymphomas.
[0057] The term “analyte” includes any molecule of interest, lly a macromolecule
such as a polypeptide, whose presence, amount, and/or identity is determined. In certain
instances, the analyte is a ar component of a cancerous cell, preferably an oncogenic
fusion protein or a signal transduction molecule.
The term form” or “transforming” includes a physical and/or chemical change
of an analyte or sample to extract the analyte or to change or modify the analyte as defined
herein. As used herein, an extraction, a manipulation, a chemical itation, an ELISA, a
complexation, an immuno-extraction, a physical or chemical modification of the analyte or
sample to measure a level or concentration or activation state of an analyte all constitute a
transformation. In other words, as long as the analyte or sample is not identical before and
after the transformation step, the change or modification is a transformation.
As used herein, the term “dilution series” is intended to include a series of
descending concentrations of a particular sample (e.g., cell lysate) or reagent (e.g., antibody).
A on series is typically produced by a process of mixing a measured amount of a
starting concentration of a sample or reagent with a diluent (e.g., dilution buffer) to create a
lower tration of the sample or reagent, and repeating the process enough times to
obtain the desired number of serial dilutions. The sample or reagent can be serially diluted at
least 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 100, 500, or 1000-fold to produce
a dilution series comprising at least 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19,
, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, or 50 ding concentrations of the sample or t. For
example, a dilution series comprising a 2-fold serial dilution of a capture antibody reagent at
a 1 mg/ml starting concentration can be produced by mixing an amount of the starting
concentration of capture antibody with an equal amount of a on buffer to create a 0.5
mg/ml concentration of the capture antibody, and repeating the process to obtain capture
antibody concentrations of 0.25 mg/ml, 0.125 mg/ml, 0.0625 mg/ml, 0.0325 mg/ml, etc.
The term “fusion protein” or “chimeric protein” includes a protein created through
the joining of two or more genes which originally encode separate proteins. Such gene
fusions are typically generated when a chromosomal translocation replaces the al
exons of one gene with intact exons from a second gene. This creates a single gene which
can be transcribed, d, and translated to produce a functional fiasion protein. In
particular embodiments, the fusion protein is an oncogenic fusion protein, z'.e., a fusion
protein involved in oncogenesis. es of oncogenic fusion proteins include, but are not
limited to, BCR—ABL, DEK-CAN, E2A-PBX1, ML, IREL-URG, CBFB-MYHl 1,
AML1-MTG8, EWS-FLI, LYT- 1 0-C0L1, HRX-ENL, HRX-AF4, NPM-ALK, C,
RUNXl-ETO, TEL-TRKC, TEL-AMLl, MLL-AF4, TCR-RBTN2, COL 1A1 -PDGF, E2A-
HLF, KHR, ETV6-NTRK3, RET-PTC, TMRSS-ERG, and TPR-MET.
The term “signal transduction molecule” or l transducer” includes proteins
and other molecules that carry out the process by which a cell converts an extracellular signal
or us into a se, typically involving ordered sequences of biochemical reactions
inside the cell. Examples of signal transduction molecules include, but are not limited to,
receptor tyrosine kinases such as EGFR (e.g, EGFR/HER—l/ErbBl, HER-2/Neu/ErbB2,
HER-3/ErbB3, HER-4/ErbB4), VEGFR-l/FLT-l, VEGFR-2/FLK-l/KDR, VEGFR—3/FLT-4,
FLT-3/FLK-2, PDGFR (e.g, PDGFRA, PDGFRB), c-Met, c-KIT/SCFR, INSR (insulin
receptor), IGF-IR, IGF-IIR, IRR (insulin receptor-related receptor), CSF-lR, FGFR l-4,
HGFR l-2, CCK4, TRK A-C, MET, RON, EPHA l-8, EPHB l-6, AXL, MER, TYRO3, TIE
l-2, TEK, RYK, DDR l-2, RET, c-ROS, erin, LTK (leukocyte tyrosine kinase), ALK
(anaplastic lymphoma kinase), ROR l-2, MUSK, AATYK l-3, RTK 106, and truncated
forms of the receptor tyrosine kinases such as p95ErbB2; non-receptor tyrosine kinases such
as Src, Frk, Btk, Csk, Abl, Zap70, Fes/Fps, Fak, Jak, Ack, and LIMK; tyrosine kinase
signaling cascade components such as Akt, MAPK/ERK, MEK, RAF, PLA2, MEKK, JNKK,
INK, p38, Shc (p66), PI3K, Ras (e.g., K-Ras, N—Ras, H-Ras), Rho, Racl, Cdc42, PLC, PKC,
p70 S6 kinase, p53, cyclin D1, STATl, STAT3, PIP2, PIP3, PDK, mTOR, BAD, p21, p27,
ROCK, 1P3, TSP-l, NOS, PTEN, RSK l-3, INK, c-Jun, Rb, CREB, Ki67, and paxillin;
nuclear e receptors such as estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR),
en receptor, glucocorticoid receptor, mineralocorticoid receptor, vitamin A receptor,
vitamin D receptor, retinoid receptor, thyroid hormone receptor, and orphan receptors;
nuclear receptor coactivators and repressors; and ations thereof.
[0062] The term e” as used herein es any ical specimen obtained from a
patient. Samples e, Without limitation, Whole blood, plasma, serum, ductal lavage
fluid, nipple aspirate, lymph (e.g, disseminated tumor cells of the lymph node), bone marrow
aspirate, saliva, urine, stool (i.e., feces), sputum, bronchial lavage fluid, tears, fine needle
aspirate (e.g., harvested by random periareolar fine needle aspiration), any other bodily fluid,
a tissue sample (e.g., tumor tissue) such as a biopsy of a tumor (e.g., needle biopsy) or a
lymph node (e.g., sentinel lymph node biopsy), and cellular extracts thereof. In some
embodiments, the sample is Whole blood or a fractional component thereof such as ,
serum, red blood cells, leukocytes such as peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and/or rare
circulating cells. In ular embodiments, the sample is obtained by isolating leukocytes
or circulating cells of a solid tumor from Whole blood or a cellular fraction thereof using any
que known in the art. In other embodiments, the sample is a formalin fixed paraffin
embedded (FFPE) tumor tissue , e.g., from a solid tumor.
As used herein, the term lating cells” comprises extratumoral cells that have
either metastasized or micrometastasized from a solid tumor. Examples of circulating cells
2012/025491
include, but are not limited to, ating tumor cells, cancer stem cells, and/or cells that are
migrating to the tumor (e.g, circulating endothelial itor cells, ating endothelial
cells, circulating pro-angiogenic myeloid cells, circulating tic cells, eta).
A “biopsy” refers to the process of ng a tissue sample for diagnostic or
prognostic evaluation, and to the tissue specimen itself. Any biopsy technique known in the
art can be applied to the s and compositions of the present invention. The biopsy
technique applied will generally depend on the tissue type to be evaluated and the size and
type of the tumor (i. e., solid or suspended (i. e., blood or ascites)), among other s.
Representative biopsy techniques include excisional biopsy, onal biopsy, needle biopsy
(e.g., core needle biopsy, fine-needle aspiration biopsy, eta), surgical biopsy, and bone
marrow biopsy. Biopsy techniques are discussed, for example, in on’s Principles of
Internal ne, Kasper, et al., eds., 16th ed., 2005, Chapter 70, and throughout Part V.
One skilled in the art will appreciate that biopsy techniques can be performed to identify
ous and/or precancerous cells in a given tissue sample.
[0065] The term “subject” or “patient” or “individual” typically includes humans, but can
also include other animals such as, e.g., other primates, rodents, canines, felines, equines,
ovines, porcines, and the like.
An “array” or “microarray” comprises a distinct set and/or dilution series of capture
antibodies immobilized or restrained on a solid support such as, for example, glass (e.g., a
glass slide), plastic, chips, pins, filters, beads (e.g, ic beads, polystyrene beads, eta),
paper, membrane (e.g, nylon, nitrocellulose, polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), eta), fiber
bundles, or any other suitable substrate. The capture antibodies are generally immobilized or
restrained on the solid support via covalent or noncovalent interactions (e.g., ionic bonds,
hydrophobic interactions, hydrogen bonds, Van der Waals forces, dipole-dipole bonds). In
n instances, the capture antibodies comprise capture tags which interact with capture
agents bound to the solid support. The arrays used in the assays of the present invention
typically comprise a plurality of ent capture antibodies and/or capture antibody
concentrations that are coupled to the surface of a solid support in different
known/addressable locations.
[0067] The term “capture antibody” is intended to include an immobilized antibody which
is c for (i. e., binds, is bound by, or forms a complex with) one or more analytes of
interest in a sample such as a cellular extract of leukocytes or rare circulating cells. In
preferred embodiments, the capture antibody is restrained on a solid support in an array.
Suitable capture antibodies for immobilizing any of a variety of oncogenic fusion proteins or
signal transduction molecules on a solid support are available from e ula, CA),
Biosource illo, CA), Cell Signaling Technologies (Danvers, MA), R&D Systems
(Minneapolis, MN), Lab Vision (Fremont, CA), Santa Cruz hnology (Santa Cruz, CA),
Sigma (St. Louis, MO), and BD Biosciences (San Jose, CA).
The term “detection antibody” as used herein es an antibody comprising a
detectable label which is specific for (i.e., binds, is bound by, or forms a complex with) one
or more analytes of interest in a sample. The term also encompasses an antibody which is
specific for one or more analytes of interest, n the antibody can be bound by another
species that comprises a detectable label. Examples of detectable labels include, but are not
limited to, biotin/streptavidin labels, nucleic acid (e.g, oligonucleotide) labels, chemically
reactive labels, fluorescent , enzyme labels, radioactive labels, and ations
thereof. Suitable detection antibodies for detecting the activation state and/or total amount of
any of a variety of oncogenic fusion ns or signal transduction molecules are available
from Upstate (Temecula, CA), Biosource (Camarillo, CA), Cell Signaling Technologies
(Danvers, MA), R&D Systems (Minneapolis, MN), Lab Vision (Fremont, CA), Santa Cruz
hnology (Santa Cruz, CA), Sigma (St. Louis, MO), and BD Biosciences (San Jose,
CA). As a non-limiting example, phospho-specific antibodies against various phosphorylated
forms of signal transduction molecules such as EGFR, c-KIT, c-Src, FLK-l, PDGFRA,
, Akt, MAPK, PTEN, Raf, and MEK are available from Santa Cruz Biotechnology.
The term “activation state-dependent antibody” includes a detection antibody which
is specific for (i.e., binds, is bound by, or forms a complex with) a particular activation state
of one or more analytes of interest in a sample. In preferred embodiments, the activation
state-dependent dy detects the phosphorylation, ubiquitination, and/or complexation
state of one or more analytes such as one or more oncogenic fusion proteins or signal
transduction molecules. In some ments, the phosphorylation of the ABL kinase
domain of the BCR-ABL fusion protein is detected using an activation state-dependent
dy. In other embodiments, the phosphorylation of members of the EGFR family of
receptor tyrosine kinases and/or the formation of heterodimeric complexes between EGFR
family members is detected using activation state-dependent antibodies.
Non-limiting examples of activation states of oncogenic fusion proteins that are
suitable for ion with activation state-dependent antibodies include phosphorylated
forms of BCR-ABL, DEK-CAN, E2A-PBXl, RAROL-PML, IREL-URG, YHl l,
AMLl-MTG8, EWS-FLI, LYT-lO-Cul, HRX-ENL, HRX-AF4, NPM-ALK, IGH-MYC,
RUNXl-ETO, TEL-TRKC, TEL-AMLl, MLL-AF4, TCR-RBTN2, COL 1A1 -PDGF, E2A-
HLF, PAX3-FKHR, ETV6-NTRK3, RET-PTC, TMRSS-ERG, and TPR-MET. Examples of
activation states (listed in parentheses) of signal transduction molecules that are suitable for
detection with activation state-dependent antibodies include, but are not limited to, EGFR
(EGFRVIII, phosphorylated (p-) EGFR, EGFR:Shc, ubiquitinated (u-) EGFR, p-EGFRVIII);
ErbB2 (p95:truncated rbB2, p-ErbB2, p95:Tr-p-ErbB2, HER-2:Shc, ErbB2:PI3K,
EGFR, ErbB2:ErbB3, ErbB2:ErbB4); ErbB3 (p-ErbB3, ErbB3:PI3K, p-ErbB3:PI3K,
ErbB3:Shc); ErbB4 (p-ErbB4, ErbB4:Shc); c-Met (p-c-Met or c-Met/HGF complex), ER (p-
ER (S118, S167); IGF-lR -lR, IGF-lR:IRS, IRS:PI3K, p-IRS, IGF-lR:PI3K); INSR
(p-INSR); KIT (p-KIT); FLT3 3); HGFRI RI); HGFR2 (p-HGFR2); RET (p-
RET); PDGFRa (p-PDGFRa); PDGFRP (p-PDGFRP); VEGFRI (p-VEGFRI,
:PLCg, VEGFR1:Src); VEGFR2 FR2, VEGFR2:PLCy, VEGFR2:Src,
:heparin sulfate, VEGFR2:VE-cadherin); VEGFR3 (p-VEGFR3); FGFRl (p-
FGFRl); FGFR2 (p-FGFR2); FGFR3 (p-FGFR3); FGFR4 (p-FGFR4); Tie1 (p-Tiel); Tie2
(p-Tie2); EphA (p-EphA); EphB B); NFKB and/or IKB (p-IK (S32), p-NFKB (S536),
p-P65 :IKBa); Akt (p-Akt (T308, S473)); PTEN N); Bad (p-Bad (S112, S136),
Bad: 143); mTor (p-mTor (S2448)); p70S6K (p-p70S6K (T229, T389»; Mek (p-Mek
(S217, S221)); Erk (p-Erk (T202, Y204)); Rsk-l (p-Rsk-l (T357, S363»; Jnk (p-Jnk (T183,
Y185)); P38 (p-P38 (T180, Yl82)); Stat3 (p-Stat-3 (Y705, S727)); Fak (p-Fak (Y576)); Rb
(p-Rb (S249, T252, S780»; Ki67; p53 (p-p53 (S392, S20)); CREB (p-CREB (S133)); C-Jun
(p-c-Jun (S63)); cSrc (p-cSrc ); and paxillin illin (Y118)).
The term “activation independent antibody” includes a detection antibody
which is specific for (i.e., binds, is bound by, or forms a complex with) one or more analytes
of interest in a sample irrespective of their activation state. For example, the activation state-
independent antibody can detect both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated forms of one or
more analytes such as one or more oncogenic fusion proteins or signal transduction
molecules.
The term “nucleic acid” or “polynucleotide” includes deoxyribonucleotides or
ribonucleotides and polymers thereof in either single- or double-stranded form such as, for
example, DNA and RNA. Nucleic acids include nucleic acids containing known nucleotide
analogs or modified backbone residues or linkages, which are tic, naturally occurring,
and non-naturally ing, and which have similar g properties as the reference
nucleic acid. Examples of such analogs include, without limitation, phosphorothioates,
phosphoramidates, methyl phosphonates, chiral-methyl phosphonates, 2’-O-methyl
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ribonucleotides, and peptide-nucleic acids (PNAs). Unless specifically limited, the term
encompasses nucleic acids containing known analogues of natural tides that have
similar binding properties as the reference nucleic acid. Unless otherwise indicated, a
particular nucleic acid sequence also implicitly encompasses conservatively modified
variants thereof and complementary sequences as well as the sequence explicitly indicated.
The term “tyrosine kinase tor” includes any of a variety of therapeutic agents
or drugs that act as selective or non-selective inhibitors of or and/or non-receptor
tyrosine kinases. t being bound to any particular theory, tyrosine kinase inhibitors
generally inhibit target tyrosine kinases by binding to the ATP-binding site of the enzyme.
Examples of tyrosine kinase inhibitors include, but are not limited to, imatinib (Gleevec®;
ST1571), nilotinib (Tasigna®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606), gefitinib (Iressa®),
nib (Sutent®; SU11248), erlotinib (Tarceva®; OSI-1774), lapatinib (GW572016;
GW2016), canertinib (C1 1033), semaxinib (SU5416), vatalanib (PTK787/ZK222584),
sorafenib (BAY 6), mide (SU101), vandetanib (ZactimaT'V'; ZD6474), ponatinib
(AP24534), derivatives thereof, analogs thereof, and ations thereof. Additional
tyrosine kinase inhibitors suitable for use in the t invention are described in, e.g., US.
Patent Nos. 5,618,829, 5,639,757, 5,728,868, 5,804,396, 6,100,254, 6,127,374, 6,245,759,
6,306,874, 6,313,138, 444, 6,329,380, 6,344,459, 6,420,382, 6,479,512, 6,498,165,
6,544,988, 6,562,818, 6,586,423, 424, 6,740,665, 6,794,393, 6,875,767, 6,927,293, and
6,958,340. One of skill in the art will know of other tyrosine kinase inhibitors suitable for
use in the present ion. In certain instances, the tyrosine kinase inhibitor is administered
in a pharmaceutically acceptable form including, without limitation, an alkali or alkaline
earth metal salt such as an aluminum, calcium, lithium, magnesium, ium, sodium, or
zinc salt; an ammonium salt such as a tertiary amine or quaternary ammonium salt; and an
acid salt such as a ate, tartarate, bitartarate, dihydrochloride, late, hemisuccinate,
citrate, isocitrate, malate, maleate, mesylate, hydrochloride, romide, ate,
acetate, carbamate, sulfate, e, formate, lactate, gluconate, glucuronate, te,
oxalacetate, fumarate, propionate, aspartate, glutamate, or te salt.
The term “incubating” is used synonymously with “contacting” and “exposing” and
does not imply any specific time or temperature requirements unless otherwise indicated.
The term “course of therapy” includes any therapeutic approach taken to relieve or
prevent one or more symptoms associated with a cancer such as a hematological malignancy
(e.g, leukemia, lymphoma, etc). The term encompasses administering any compound, drug,
procedure, and/or regimen useful for improving the health of an individual with cancer and
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includes any of the therapeutic agents described herein. One skilled in the art will appreciate
that either the course of therapy or the dose of the t course of therapy can be changed
(e.g., increased or decreased) based upon the expression and/or activation levels of one or
more oncogenic fusion ns and/or signal transduction molecules determined using the
methods of the present ion.
111. Description of the Embodiments
The present invention advantageously provides novel apparatuses and s for
isolating or recovering a subset of blood cells such as, e.g., leukocytes (e.g., normal and/or
malignant leukocytes), leukemia cells, foam cells, and/or circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from
blood samples by filtration without changing the intracellular concentration of a therapeutic
agent such as an anticancer drug (e.g., a tyrosine kinase inhibitor such as, e.g. imatinib
mesylate (Gleevec®), nilotinib (Tasigna®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606),
gefitinib a®), sunitinib (Sutent®), erlotinib (Tarceva®), lapatinib (GW-572016;
Tykerb®), canertinib (CI 1033), semaxinib (SU5416), vatalanib (PTK787/ZK222584),
sorafenib (BAY 43-9006; Nexavar®), leflunomide (SUlOl), anib (ZACTIMATM;
ZD6474), nib (AP24534), and combinations thereof). Contrary to the art, the
tuses and methods of the present invention provide cell s from recovered cells
such as leukocytes, ia cells, foam cells, and/or circulating tumor cells without
ntial dilution of a therapeutic agent such as an anticancer drug (e.g., a ne kinase
inhibitor) .
In certain instances, the present ion provides apparatuses and methods for
isolating tumor cells from a homogenate, lysate, or cellular extract of a solid tumor.
In particular embodiments, the apparatuses and methods of the present invention
substantially remove plasma, which contains proteases and atases that can degrade or
desphosphorylate target proteins such as analytes of interest, and also substantially remove
interfering proteins that can affect target protein assays.
represents one embodiment of a method to isolate and harvest tumor cells of
the present invention. Those of skill in the art will recognize other s and modifications
to the method within the scope of the present invention.
[0080] In one method 100, tumor cells from a patient such as a patient suffering from CML
(optionally being treated) are isolated and harvested. As shown in whole blood is
collected 110 and filtered to remove red blood cells. In certain instances, the whole blood
from patients can be treated or non-treated with an anticancer drug, such as a BCR-ABL
2012/025491
inhibitor, prior to isolation. Advantageously, the methods herein ensure that the amount and
concentration of the inhibitor or therapeutic agent present in the cells in vivo is maintained in
vitro. In certain aspects, the t invention provides a method for preparing a lysate of
leukocytes from a whole blood sample t substantial dilution or ially no dilution
of a therapeutic agent such as an anticancer drug. The collected whole blood is loaded into
an apparatus as described herein. In certain aspects, the blood is freshly drawn prior to
isolation of the leukocytes. If a fresh blood sample is unavailable, blood samples can be
processed within a period such as 3 hours, 6 hours, 12 hours, 18 hours, 24 hours (1 day), 36
hours, 48 hours, and the like after being drawn. Samples are typically kept at room
temperature prior to processing. In certain aspects, a protease and/or phosphatase inhibitor
can be added to the blood sample 110. Thereafter, the blood is mixed by for e, gently
inverting up and down in a tube or vial.
Afterwards, the erythrocytes are removed 121 lly by centrifugation through a
filter or membrane. In certain aspects, an especially designed filtration apparatus is used as
shown herein. ably, the erythrocytes are present in the collection tube after
centrifugation. In one aspect, the method includes centrifuging the vial or tube apparatus to
capture or isolate the leukocytes 142 on a filter membrane such as a stacked collection of
filter membranes (one or more filters), and to separate red blood cells (and plasma) into a
collection tube.
[0082] After filtration or centrifilgation of the red blood cells (and plasma), a lysis buffer is
used to lyse the captured ytes 167. In one aspect, protein later lysis buffer can be used.
After capture, the leukocytes are thereafter lysed, but without a wash step after capture to
thus prepare a lysate of leukocytes. The therapy concentration in the whole blood cells is the
same before and after the procedure 100. In some instances, the therapy concentration is 10
uM before procedure 100 and 10 uM after procedure 100. In other instances, the y
concentration is 1 uM before procedure 100 and 1 uM after procedure 100. In yet other
instances, the therapy concentration is 0.1 uM before procedure 100 and 0.1 uM after
ure 100. The lysate is then collected 173 in a second collection tube, e.g., by
centrifugation. The lysate from the ytes is without substantial dilution or essentially no
dilution of a therapeutic agent such as an anticancer drug. That is, the in viva cellular
tration of a therapeutic agent (e.g., anticancer drug) is essentially or substantially the
same as the in vitro concentration of the therapeutic agent (e.g., anticancer drug) in the cell
lysate.
In another aspect, the t invention provides a method for preparing a lysate of
leukocytes (e.g., normal, malignant, and/or diseased leukocytes) from a whole blood sample
without substantial dilution of a therapeutic agent (e.g., an ncer drug), the method
comprising:
(a) loading the whole blood sample into a cell isolation (filtration) apparatus
such as an apparatus as described herein;
(b) fiJging the apparatus to capture the leukocytes on the one or more
stacked filter membranes and to separate red blood cells (and plasma) into a collection tube;
(c) lysing the leukocytes captured on the one or more stacked filter membranes
with lysis buffer but without a wash step between steps (b) and (c) to thereby prepare a lysate
of leukocytes.
In certain embodiments, the method of the ion filrther comprises replacing the
collection tube with a second tion tube between steps (b) and (c). In certain other
embodiments, the method of the invention filrther comprises centrifilging the tus
containing the second collection tube after lysing the leukocytes in step (c) and collecting the
lysate of leukocytes in the second collection tube.
In some ments, the whole blood sample is obtained from a subject receiving
a therapeutic agent (e.g, an anticancer drug). In other embodiments, the whole blood sample
is incubated in vitro with a eutic agent (e.g., an anticancer drug) prior to loading into
the apparatus.
In fiarther embodiments, the whole blood sample is obtained from a subject having
or suspected of having atherosclerosis or receiving treatment for atherosclerosis (e.g, statin
therapy). In other embodiments, the whole blood sample is obtained from a subject having or
suspected of having a cancer such as a hematological ancy (e.g, a leukemia such as
chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)) or receiving ent for the cancer (e.g., anticancer
drug therapy).
In particular embodiments, the expression and/or activation level of at least one
oncogenic filsion protein and/or signal transduction le is measured in the lysate of
leukocytes. In preferred embodiments, the at least one oncogenic fusion protein is BCR-
ABL. Additional examples of oncogenic ‘l proteins and/or signal transduction
molecules of interest are described herein.
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As such, in one aspect, the t invention provides an apparatus for isolating and
separating leukocytes (e.g, normal, malignant, and/or diseased leukocytes) from red blood
cells (and plasma) in a whole blood sample, the tus comprising:
a filtration device comprising an upper chamber, a lower chamber, and one or
more stacked filter membranes between the upper and lower chambers, n the one or
more stacked filter membranes are capable of retaining the leukocytes; and
a collection tube for collecting the red blood cells (and plasma) from the
whole blood , wherein the filtration device is placed on top of the collection tube, and
wherein the red blood cells (and plasma) are separated from the leukocytes and are collected
in the collection tube following centrifugation.
In some embodiments, the whole blood sample is loaded into the upper chamber of
the filtration device. In other embodiments, the filtration device comprises two, three, or four
stacked filter nes. In certain embodiments, the upper chamber further comprises a
snap-cap lid attached thereto.
[0090] In fiarther embodiments, the apparatus r ses a second collection tube,
wherein the (first) collection tube containing the red blood cells (and plasma) is replaced with
the second tion tube following (a first) centrifilgation. In some instances, a lysate of the
leukocytes is collected in the second collection tube following the addition of lysis buffer to
the upper chamber and (a second) centrifugation. In ular instances, the lysis buffer is
added to the upper chamber without washing the one or more stacked filter membranes. In
some ments, the lysis buffer is incubated above the filter for at least 1, 5, 10, 15, 20,
, 60, or 120 minutes, preferably between about 15 to about 30 minutes, at 4°C (or on ice)
prior to centrifugation and collection in the second collection tube.
In alternative embodiments, the apparatus further comprises a second collection
tube, wherein the one or more d filter membranes are removed from the filtration
device (e.g., with forceps) following centrifugation and placed into the second collection
tube. In some instances, the second collection tube contains lysis buffer, and the leukocytes
are lysed after the one or more d filter nes are placed or incubated into the
second collection tube.
[0092] In certain instances, the lysate prepared using the apparatus of the present invention
comprises a cellular extract of normal and/or malignant (e.g., cancerous) leukocytes such as
granulocytes (polymorphonuclear leukocytes), which e, e.g., neutrophils, basophils,
and eosinophils; agranulocytes (mononuclear leukocytes), which include, e.g., peripheral
2012/025491
blood mononuclear cells such as cytes and monocytes, leukemia cells, which include,
e. g., chronic enous leukemia (CML) cells; macrophages, which include, e.g, foam
cells; and mixtures thereof.
In certain embodiments, the leukocytes, leukemia cells, foam cells, ating cells,
or other cells present in the whole blood sample can be stimulated in vitro with one or more
growth factors before, during, and/or after incubation with one or more therapeutic agents
such as one or more anticancer drugs of interest. atory growth factors include, but are
not limited to, epidermal growth factor (EGF), heregulin (HRG), TGF-(x, PIGF, angiopoietin
(Ang), NRGl, PGF, , VEGF, PDGF, IGF, FGF, HGF, cytokines, and the like.
Protocols for the stimulation and lysis of cells found in whole blood are described in PCT
Publication No. WC 2008/036802, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety
for all purposes.
In certain embodiments, the whole blood sample is obtained from a subject having
or suspected of haVing . In some instances, the cancer may be caused by the formation
of an oncogenic fusion protein due to a chromosomal translocation in the cancer cells. Non-
limiting es of such cancers include a hematological malignancy, an osteogenic
sarcoma, a soft tissue sarcoma, and combinations thereof In particular ments, the
hematological malignancy is a leukemia or lymphoma. In one preferred embodiment, the
leukemia is chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). In other instances, the subject is either
ing or not receiVing ncer drug therapy.
In certain other embodiments, the anticancer drug comprises an anti-signaling agent
(i.e., a cytostatic drug) such as a onal antibody or a tyrosine kinase inhibitor; an antiproliferative
agent; a chemotherapeutic agent (i.e., a cytotoxic drug); a hormonal therapeutic
agent; a radiotherapeutic agent; a vaccine; and/or any other compound with the ability to
reduce or abrogate the uncontrolled growth of aberrant cells such as cancerous cells. In some
embodiments, the isolated cells are treated with one or more anti-signaling agents, anti-
proliferative agents, and/or hormonal therapeutic agents in combination with at least one
chemotherapeutic agent.
Examples of anti-signaling agents include, without limitation, monoclonal
antibodies such as trastuzumab (Herceptin®), alemtuzumab (Campath®), bevacizumab
(Avastin®), cetuximab (Erbitux®), gemtuzumab (Mylotarg®), panitumumab (VectibixT'V'),
rituximab (Rituxan®), and tositumomab (BEXXAR®); tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as
ib mesylate (Gleevec®), nib (Tasigna®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-
606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib (Sutent®), erlotinib (Tarceva®), lapatinib 2016;
Tykerb®), canertinib (C1 1033), semaxinib (SU54l6), vatalanib (PTK787/ZK222584),
sorafenib (BAY 43-9006; Nexavar®), leflunomide (SUlOl), ponatinib (AP24534), and
anib (ZACTIMATM; ZD6474); and combinations thereof
Exemplary anti-proliferative agents e mTOR inhibitors such as sirolimus
(rapamycin), temsirolimus (CCI-779), and everolimus (RAD001); Akt inhibitors such as
lL6-hydroxymethyl-chiro-inositol(R)O-methylO-octadecyl-sn-glycerocarbonate, 9-
methoxymethylellipticinium acetate, 1 ,3 -dihydro- l -(l 6-phenyl- l H-imidazo [4,5 -
g] quinoxalinyl)phenyl)methyl)piperidinyl)-2H-benzimidazolone, l 0-(4 ’ -(N-
lamino)butyl)chlorophenoxazine, 3-formylchromone micarbazone (Cu(II)Clz
x), API-2, a lS-mer peptide derived from amino acids 10-24 of the proto-oncogene
TCLl (Hiromura et al., J. Biol. Chem, 279:53407-53418 (2004), KP372-l, and the
compounds described in Kozikowski et al., J. Am. Chem Soc, 125:1144-1145 (2003) and
Kau et al., Cancer Cell, 4:463-476 (2003); and combinations thereof.
[0098] Non-limiting examples of chemotherapeutic agents include um-based drugs
(e.g, latin, cisplatin, carboplatin, spiroplatin, iproplatin, satraplatin, eta), alkylating
agents (e. g., cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, mbucil, busulfan, melphalan,
mechlorethamine, uramustine, thiotepa, nitrosoureas, eta), anti-metabolites (e.g, 5-
fluorouracil, azathioprine, 6-mercaptopurine, methotrexate, leucovorin, capecitabine,
cytarabine, floxuridine, fludarabine, gemcitabine (Gemzar®), pemetrexed (ALIMTA®),
raltitrexed, eta), plant alkaloids (e.g, vincristine, vinblastine, vinorelbine, vindesine,
podophyllotoxin, paclitaxel (Taxol®), docetaxel (Taxotere®), etc.), topoisomerase inhibitors
(e.g, irinotecan, topotecan, amsacrine, etoposide (VPl6), etoposide phosphate, teniposide,
etc.), antitumor antibiotics (e.g, doxorubicin, ycin, daunorubicin, epirubicin,
actinomycin, bleomycin, mitomycin, mitoxantrone, plicamycin, eta), pharmaceutically
acceptable salts thereof, isomers thereof, derivatives thereof, analogs thereof, and
combinations thereof.
Examples of hormonal therapeutic agents include, Without limitation, ase
inhibitors (e.g, aminoglutethimide, anastrozole (Arimidex®), letrozole (Femara®), vorozole,
exemestane (Aromasin®), 4-androstene-3,6,l7-trione ), l,4,6-androstatrien-3,l7-
dione (ATD), tane (Lentaron®), etc), selective estrogen receptor modulators (e.g.,
xifene, clomifene, trant, lasofoxifene, raloxifene, fen, toremifene, eta),
steroids (e.g, dexamethasone), finasteride, and gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists
(GnRH) such as goserelin, ceutically acceptable salts thereof, stereoisomers thereof,
derivatives thereof, analogs thereof, and combinations thereof
Non-limiting examples of cancer es include ANYARA from Active Biotech,
DCVax-LB from Northwest Biotherapeutics, EP-2lOl from IDM Pharma, GVlOOl from
Pharmexa, IO-2055 from Idera Pharmaceuticals, INGN 225 from Introgen Therapeutics and
Stimuvax from Biomira/Merck.
Examples of radiotherapeutic agents include, but are not limited to, radionuclides
such as 47Sc, 64Cu’ 67Cu’ 89Sr’ 86Y’ 87Y’ 90Y, 105Rh, lllAg, 111111, ll7mSn’ 149Pm, 153$m, 166HO’
177 186 188 211 212
Lu, Re, Re, At, and B1, optionally ated to antibodies directed against- - . . . . .
tumor antigens.
In certain other embodiments, the whole blood sample is obtained from a subject
having or suspected of having atherosclerosis (also known as arteriosclerotic ar disease
or ASVD). Atherosclerosis is a disease typically affecting arterial blood vessels, a chronic
atory response in the walls of arteries, caused largely by the accumulation of
macrophages such as foam cells and promoted by low-density lipoproteins (plasma proteins
that carry cholesterol and triglycerides) without adequate removal of fats and cholesterol
from the macrophages by fianctional high y oteins (HDL). Examples of drugs
suitable for the treatment of atherosclerosis include, without limitation, statins such as
atorvastatin (Lipitor and Torvast), fluvastatin (Lescol), lovastatin (Mevacor, Altocor,
ev), mevastatin (Compactin), pitavastatin (Livalo, Pitava), tatin (Pravachol,
Selektine, Lipostat), statin (Crestor), simvastatin (Zocor, , combinations thereof,
as well as combination preparations such as ezetimibe and simvastatin (Vytorin), lovastatin
and niacin or), atorvastatin and amlodipine besylate (Caduet), and simvastatin and
niacin (Simcor). In some instances, the subject is either receiving or not receiving therapy
with an atherosclerosis drug such as a statin.
In other embodiments, the whole blood sample is ted in vitro with one or
more therapeutic agents such as one or more anticancer drugs prior to isolation of leukocytes.
In particular embodiments, leukocytes that are ed or captured on the filter membranes
comprise normal leukocytes, malignant leukocytes, or combinations thereof.
[0104] In ular embodiments, the apparatuses of the invention provide for preparing
the lysate or cellular extract from whole blood samples by recovering or ing cells of
interest such as malignant leukocytes (e.g, chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) cells)
without any wash steps after cell recovery or isolation. The cellular extract thus obtained can
be analyzed for the level of expression and/or activation of one or more oncogenic fusion
proteins such as BCR—ABL, substrates thereof, pathways thereof, or combinations thereof
Without being bound to any particular theory, eliminating the need for any wash steps after
cell ion is advantageous because cells of interest can be recovered from blood without
changing the intracellular concentration of a therapeutic agent such as an anticancer drug
(e.g., a tyrosine kinase inhibitor). As set forth in the Examples below, cell isolation using the
apparatuses bed herein without any wash steps is contrary to the art-accepted practice
of washing cells after isolation and provides cellular extracts from red cells without
substantial dilution of a therapeutic agent such as an anticancer drug (e.g., a tyrosine kinase
inhibitor such as, e.g inside the cells.
., Gleevec®, Tasigna®, Sprycel®, etc.)
In particular embodiments, the apparatuses of the t invention are substantially
similar or identical to the apparatus ed herein. One skilled in the art will appreciate that
the dimensions of one or more components of the apparatus bed herein and illustrated
can be varied, taking into account parameters such as, for example, the volume of sample to
be loaded into the tus, the type of fuge to be used to spin the apparatus, the
volume of lysis buffer to be added to the upper chamber of the apparatus, etc.
g now to -G, as shown therein, there is a filtration device or
apparatus for sample tion. is the upper portion or chamber of the apparatus
201 which is a rical tube with male helical ridges or threads 210. The upper portion
with cap 215 is shown in -C. This upper portion 201 can optionally have a cap 215
that snaps shut to prevent spilling of the sample. In certain embodiments, the snap-cap lid
215 is tethered via strap 217 to the upper portion and can be used to securely close the
opening of the upper chamber after a sample and/or a reagent is added to the filtration device.
The upper chamber 201 of the apparatus of the present invention preferably attaches to a
lower camber portion or chamber 222 as shown in D-E. The threads 210 of the upper
portion fit securely into female grooves 221 of the lower n or chamber 222. Preferably,
the inner diameters of the upper and lower chambers are similar as to create a cylindrical tube
which allows liquids to pass therethrough.
In certain aspects, the lower chamber 222 of the filtration device or apparatus is a
cylindrical tube with an internal screw thread at one end 221 (). In certain aspects,
one or more (e.g., a plurality such as two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, or
more) stacked filter membranes is placed between the screw threads of the upper chamber
and lower chamber before the chambers are securely ed together. The filter(s) sits on
pin wheel 225 of the lower chamber as shown in .
WO 54257
In ular aspects, the filter membranes can be 2-4 (e.g., 2, 3, or 4) layers of
filters such as Pall filters (e.g., Leukosorb Medium). In other aspects, the filtration device is
an assembly of separate chambers and filters which are joined together prior to use such as in
a kit. The filtration device can be placed on top of a collection tube 250 as shown in -
G for the separation of red blood cells (and plasma) from a patient blood sample. The
portions of , and join or fit er to form one embodiment of the
apparatus filtration device of the present invention. The filtration device (upper and lower
chambers) can be placed on top of a collection vessel 250 for the separation of red blood cells
from a patient blood . The lower chamber of the assembled filtration device is
positioned in the collection vessel via opening 255 and the upper chamber is on top of the
opening of the collection vessel. Examples of collection vessel 250 include, but are not
limited to, tubes such as plastic culture tubes having a capacity of 1 ml, 2 ml, 3 ml, 4 ml, 5
ml, 6 ml, 7 ml, 8 ml, 14ml, 16 ml and the like.
In certain aspects, the lower portion of the filtration device of the present invention
has a built-in or optional funnel in the lower portion. As shown in -E, the filnnel may
have a certain angular dimension to ensure that the sample passes into and through the lower
chamber into the tion tube without going down the inner wall of the lower portion. For
example, FIG 3A shows a internal funnel 301 of about 2° off the horizontal. FIG 3B shows
an internal filnnel 310 of approximately 7° off the horizontal. In certain other aspects, 3C shows a funnel approximately 12° off the horizontal. and are yet other
embodiments of the funnel design of the present ion. A skilled artisan will understand
and appreciate that the filnnel design can be any angle such that the filtrate stays off the walls
ofthe lower n. Suitable angles include 1°, 2°, 3°, 4°, 5°, 6°, 7°, 8°, 9°, 10°, 11°, 12°,
13°, 14°, 15°, 16°, 17°, 18°, 19°, 20° or more for the funnel portion. In an alternative
embodiment, shows a funnel insert 325 into the lower portion of a filtration device of
the t ion.
In certain s, the filtration device of the present invention is shown in -
D. shows the exploded view of the upper portion or chamber 410, a lower portion or
chamber 420 and a filter stack 412 in-between. In , view 405 is looking down on the
device and view 422 is looking up at the device. shows the upper portion 430 and
the lower chamber or portion 420 screwed together. In , view 405 is looking down
on the device and view 425 is looking up at the device. shows collection tube 435.
In ion, in certain aspects, tion tube 435 preferably holds red blood cells. In , view 434 is looking down on the device and view 440 is looking up at the device. depicts the tion tube 435 joined with the upper chamber 410 and lower chamber or
portion 420. In , view 405 is looking down on the device and view 461 is looking up
at the device.
In some embodiments, in operation, a volume (e. g., 1 ml) of patient blood treated
with a solution mixture comprising a protease and/or a phosphatase inhibitors is loaded into
the upper chamber of an assembled cell isolation apparatus. The tus can be
centrifuged in a tabletop or clinical centrifuge, such as an Allegra 6R centrifuge (Beckman),
Sorvall Legend centrifuge (Thermo Scientific), or Heraeus Megafuge centrifuge (Kendro). In
some aspects, the apparatus is fuged for 5-30 minutes at 600-2,000 rpms at 4°C. After
centrifugation, the tion vessel containing the red blood cells (and plasma) is removed
from the cell isolation apparatus, capped and set aside.
In filrther embodiments, a second collection vessel is attached to the filtration
. Non-limiting examples of a second collection tube for the cell lysate include 1.5 ml
and 2 ml microcentrifuge tubes. Without a washing step, lysis buffer is added to the upper
chamber of the filtration device. The upper chamber is capped and the filtration device and
second collection tube are shaken usly. In certain instances, the cell isolation
apparatus is ted at 4°C for at least 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 60, or 120 minutes, preferably
between about 15 to about 30 minutes. The tus can then be centrifuged (e. g., 3,000rpm
for 5 min). The cell lysate can be transferred to another centrifuge vessel such as a
microcentrifuge tube for storage at -70°C.
-D show an alternative embodiment of the filtration device or apparatus 500
for sample collection of the present invention. In this embodiment, there is an upper n
501 and a bottom n or chamber 530 with a sleeve or middle connector 522. The middle
connector or sleeve 522 can optionally be fixed to either the upper 501 or bottom portion 530.
As shown in , in certain aspects, the upper portion has ridges or male ridges and can
be fixed to the sleeve or bottom portion. In , the apparatus is shown with cap 510.
shows that the bottom n 530 can optionally have a cap 534 to keep this portion
sealed. depicts a lower chamber or portion 522 clearly g female grooves.
This portion can optionally be fixed to the bottom portion such that the sleeve in integral to
the bottom portion of the device.
-C show yet another aspect of the present invention. A is a cross-
sectional view of a device of the t invention, wherein the bottom portion 610 is joined
with the upper portion 625 with sleeve 633 enabling joinder. Inset is a close up of
the ns joined together with threads 625 and middle section 633 with a filnnel section,
Collection r 610 is also shown. shows middle section with pinwheel
geometry. The filter stack optionally sits on this pinwheel.
In other further embodiments, after the cell isolation apparatus is fuged and
the red blood cells are collected and set aside in the collection tube, the upper chamber and
lower chamber of the filtration device are separated (e.g., unscrewed). Using forceps, the
filter membranes 422 () containing the separated leukocytes and/or circulating tumor
cells are placed in a second collection vessel containing cell lysis buffer. Non-limiting
es of a second collection vessel include 1.5 ml and 2 ml microcentrifuge tubes. In
some instances, the second collection vessel is fiarther incubated at 4°C for at least 1, 5, 10,
, 20, 30, 60, or 120 minutes, preferably between about 15 to about 30 minutes. In other
aspects, the second collection vessel is placed on ice and briefly vortexed for 10 seconds
every 10 s for a total of 30 minutes. In some embodiments, the cell lysate is stored at -
70°C. In other embodiments, the vessel containing the lysate is fuged to remove the
filter membranes and cell fragments. The atant of the cell lysate can be transferred to
another tube for storage at -70°C.
In some embodiments, the apparatuses of the invention are provided as a sterile kit.
In some instances, the sterile kit comprises a ion device sing an upper chamber
(optionally with an attached snap-cap lid), lower chamber and a stack of one or more filter
membranes (e.g, 1, 2, 3, or 4 layers of filter membrane), and one or a plurality of collection
tubes (optionally with snap-cap lids). Each of the components can be packaged separately
and the kit assembled or each of the components can be placed in to a sterile e. In
other instances, the e kit comprises a tube filter unit and one or a plurality of collection
tubes (optionally with snap-cap lids). The tube filter unit comprises a cylindrical tube affixed
at one end with one or more (e.g, a plurality of two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine,
ten, or more) filter membranes, wherein the membranes are able to retain healthy and
malignant leukocytes and/or circulating tumor cells from whole blood samples. In particular
instances, the filter membranes are (e.g, 2, 3, or 4) layers of filters such as PALL filters (e.g,
Leukosorb Medium). In yet other instances, the sterile kit comprises a tube filter unit, a
plastic adaptor and one or a ity of collection tubes (optionally with snap-cap lids). The
adaptor is positioned in the opening of a collection tube and securely attached to the filter
membrane of the tube filter unit.
In r embodiments, the apparatus of the present invention comprises a plurality
of filtration devices or tube filter units and a multi-well or multi-tube collection vessel such
as a 2-well, 12-well, 24-well, 48-well, or 96-well plate. In certain instances, the plurality of
ion devices can be substantially r to at least two or more of the devices as
depicted in . In certain other embodiments, the array of filtration devices can be a
multi-well plate such as a 96-well cell isolation plate. For example, a first l filtration
plate can be fitted with filter membranes (e.g., LeukoLOCK (Life Technologies), or Acroprep
(PALL) or Leukosorb (PALL)) or membranes substantially r thereto. In other
embodiments, the first 96-well filtration plate is substantially similar to or is a commercially
available multi-well plate fitted with filter membranes, such as but not limited to, ore
Cat. #MAMIC8510 and #MSBCSlZlO. In some instances, the commercially available multi-
well plates are sterile and comprise a first multi-well plate fitted with filter membranes and a
second multi-well plate that fits under the first multi-well plate and can be used as a
collection . In these embodiments, fresh ted blood can be loaded into wells of a
first 96-well cell isolation plate. The first multi-well plate is analogous to both the upper and
lower chambers of the filtration device discussed above. A second 96-well microplate can
serve as a blood collection plate (which is analogous to the collection tube) and can be placed
under the first multi-well plate i.e., the cell isolation plate with filter membranes. This plate
assembly can be centrifuged at room temperature for about 5 min at a speed ranging from
about 600 rpm to 3,000 rpm, such as e.g., about 600 rpm, 1,000 rpm, 2,000 rpm, and 3,000
rpm. After filgation, the filter membrane can be transferred to a centrifugation tube and
the cells on the filter membrane can be treated with a volume of lysis buffer (e.g., 300 01 of
lysis buffer) and vortexed briefly, in order to lyse the cells. The centrifiagation tube
containing the cell lysate can be placed on ice for about 30 min and subjected to brief
vortexing about every 10 minutes. Thereafter the tube can be centrifuged for about 15
s to separate the cellular debris from the supernatant. The atant containing the
lysate can be ted and analyzed. In certain aspects, the plurality of filtration devices are
manipulated with robotic armature under computer control. High throughput sample analysis
is d-out and the plurality of samples is analyzed. Steps of procedure 100, such as the
addition of lysis buffer to lyse the captured leukocytes 167, are optionally performed with a
computerized c system. In some aspects, in vitro treatment of patient blood sample
with anticancer drug and sample analysis as described herein are performed in a high
throughput manner.
IV. Drug Selection and Optimization for Cancer Therapy
In certain aspects, the present invention provides methods for monitoring the
efficacy of cancer therapy in ts with a hematological malignancy. In certain aspects,
the present invention provides methods for the selection of appropriate therapies to down-
regulate or shut down one or more deregulated signaling pathways. In certain other aspects,
the present invention provides methods for optimizing y and/or reducing toxicity in a
subject having cancer and receiving a course of therapy for the ent of cancer. Thus, the
present invention may be used to facilitate the design of personalized ies based on the
particular molecular signature provided by the collection of activated oncogenic fusion
ns and/or signal transduction proteins in a given patient’s cancer or tumor.
ingly, in one particular aspect, the present invention provides a method for
ring the efficacy of an anticancer drug in a subject, wherein the t has a
hematological malignancy, comprising:
(a) administering the anticancer drug to the subject, wherein the first
administration of the anticancer drug is at time T1;
(b) isolating cells of a cancer at a time T2 in a sample from the subject;
(c) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(d) measuring the activation state and or sion level of an oncogenic
fusion protein at a time T2 in a sample from the subject; and
determining a course of treatment based upon the activation state and or
expression level of the oncogenic fusion protein.
In certain embodiments, the method further comprises measuring the activation state
of the oncogenic fusion protein at T0, i.e., prior to the first administration of the ncer
drug. In some instances, the oncogenic fusion protein is BCR-ABL. In certain instances, the
hematological malignancy is a lymphoma or a leukemia such as chronic myelogenous
leukemia (CML). The time difference between T1 and T2 is about 1 week to about 6 months
such as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, or 24
week(s). The time difference between To and T1 is about 1 day to about 3 weeks. In certain
other aspects, the methods further include measuring expression and or activation levels of at
least one other signal transduction molecule such as CRKL, AKT, STATS and SRC.
In certain aspects, the course of treatment is selected from changing the ncer
drug dose, changing the anti-cancer drug, including an additional anticancer drug, ng
the length of treatment and staying the existing course of treatment.
In certain aspects, the sample comprises an extract of ed cells. In certain
s, the isolated cells are incubated in vitro with at least one anticancer drug (e.g., 2
anticancer drugs) at T0 (prior to tion of treatment). In other instances, the isolated cells
are incubated in vitro with at least two anticancer drugs at T2, prior to determining the course
of treatment.
In yet other ments, the present invention provides a method for selecting an
anticancer drug in a subject having a hematological malignancy:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer from a subject;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) measuring the activation state level of an oncogenic fusion protein in an
isolated cell from a sample from the subject;
(d) incubating the isolated cell with at least one anticancer drug prior to
initiation of treatment;
(e) lysing the isolated cells incubated with at least one anticancer drug prior to
initiation of treatment to produce a cellular extract;
(f) measuring the activation state level of the oncogenic fusion protein in the
incubated cells; and
(g) selecting a course of treatment based upon the activation state level of the
oncogenic fusion protein.
In another embodiment, the present invention provides a method for ing an
anticancer drug in a subject having a hematological malignancy:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer from a subject;
(b) lysing the ed cells to produce a ar extract;
(c) measuring the activation state level of BCR-ABL in an isolated cell from a
sample from the subject;
(d) incubating the isolated cell with at least one anticancer drug prior to
initiation of treatment;
(e) lysing the ed cells incubated with at least one anticancer drug prior to
initiation of treatment to produce a cellular extract;
(f) measuring the activation state level of BCR-ABL in the incubated cells;
(g) selecting a course of treatment based upon the activation state level of
BCR-ABL.
In n aspects, the course of treatment is selected from the group consisting of
selecting the ncer drug, ing the ncer dose, and determining the length of
treatment. In n other aspects, the methods further e measuring expression and or
activation levels of at least one other signal transduction molecule such as CRKL, AKT,
STATS and SRC.
In another aspect, the present ion provides a method for optimizing therapy
and/or reducing toxicity in a subject having cancer and receiving a course of therapy for the
treatment of , the method comprising:
(a) isolating cancer cells after administration of an anticancer drug (e.g., one
or more tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as Gleevec®, a®, Sprycel®, etc);
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a ar extract;
(c) measuring a level of expression and/or activation (e.g, phosphorylation) of
an oncogenic fusion protein in the cellular extract using an assay described herein; and
(d) comparing the measured level of expression and/or activation of the
oncogenic fusion protein to a level of sion and/or activation of the oncogenic fiasion
protein measured at an earlier time during the course of therapy; and
(e) determining a subsequent dose of the course of therapy for the subject or
whether a different course of therapy should be administered to the subject based upon the
comparison from step (d).
In particular embodiments, both total and ted (e.g, phosphorylated) oncogenic
fusion protein (e.g., BCR-ABL) levels are measured in the cellular extract in accordance with
the dy-based assays of the present invention and a ratio of activated to total oncogenic
fusion protein levels (e.g., ratio of o/total BCR-ABL n levels) can be calculated
and used to te the course of therapy for a subject, e.g, by comparing the phospho/total
ratio of oncogenic fusion protein levels to a ratio of the same calculated for the subject at an
earlier time (e.g., at an earlier time while on anticancer drug therapy or at a point in time prior
to anticancer drug therapy).
[0128] In another aspect, the present invention provides a method for selecting a suitable
ncer drug for the treatment of a , the method comprising:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer after administration of an ncer drug, or
prior to incubation with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) determining a level of expression and/or activation (e.g., phosphorylation)
of an oncogenic fusion protein in the ar extract using an assay described herein; and
(d) determining whether the anticancer drug is suitable or unsuitable for the
treatment of the cancer by comparing the level of expression and/or activation detected for
the oncogenic fusion protein with a reference expression and/or tion profile generated
in the absence of the anticancer drug.
In a preferred embodiment, the method for selecting a suitable anticancer drug for
the treatment of a cancer comprises:
(a) ing cells of a cancer after administration of an anticancer drug, or
prior to tion with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) ining a level of expression and/or activation (e.g., phosphorylation)
of an oncogenic fusion n in the cellular extract using an assay comprising a dilution
series of capture antibodies specific for the oncogenic fusion n, wherein the capture
antibodies are restrained on a solid support;
(d) comparing the level of expression and/or activation detected for the
oncogenic fusion protein with a reference expression and/or activation profile generated in
the absence of the anticancer drug; and
(e) indicating that the anticancer drug is le for the treatment of the
cancer when the level of expression and/or activation detected for the oncogenic fusion
protein is changed (e.g., substantially decreased) compared to the reference expression and/or
activation profile.
In some embodiments, the methods of the present invention may be useful to aid or
assist in the selection of a suitable anticancer drug for the treatment of a cancer such as, e.g.,
a hematological malignancy. In other ments, the methods of the t invention
may be useful for ing the selection of a suitable anticancer drug for the treatment of a
cancer such as, e.g., a hematological malignancy. In n embodiments, the method
further or alternatively comprises the step of indicating that the anticancer drug is unsuitable
for the treatment of the cancer when the level of expression and/or activation detected for the
oncogenic fusion protein is not changed (e.g., not substantially decreased) compared to the
reference expression and/or activation . In further embodiments, one or more signal
transduction molecules present in the cellular extract are detected in addition to one or more
oncogenic fusion proteins, and the ncer drug is determined to be suitable or unsuitable
based on this “molecular profile.”
In yet another aspect, the present invention provides a method for identifying the
se of a cancer to treatment with an anticancer drug, the method comprising:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer after administration of an anticancer drug, or
prior to incubation with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a ar extract;
(c) determining a level of sion and/or activation (e.g., orylation)
of an oncogenic fusion protein in the cellular extract using an assay described herein; and
(d) identifying the cancer as responsive or non-responsive to treatment with
the anticancer drug by comparing the level of expression and/or activation detected for the
oncogenic fusion n with a reference expression and/or activation profile generated in
the absence of the ncer drug.
In a preferred embodiment, the method for identifying the response of a cancer to
treatment with an ncer drug comprises:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer after administration of an anticancer drug, or
prior to tion with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) determining a level of expression and/or activation (e.g., phosphorylation)
of an oncogenic filSlOI‘l protein in the cellular extract using an assay sing a dilution
series of capture antibodies c for the oncogenic fusion protein, wherein the capture
antibodies are ined on a solid support;
(d) comparing the level of expression and/or activation detected for the
oncogenic fusion protein with a reference expression and/or activation profile generated in
the absence of the anticancer drug; and
(e) indicating that the cancer is responsive to treatment with the anticancer
drug when the level of expression and/or activation detected for the oncogenic fusion protein
is changed (e.g, substantially decreased) compared to the reference expression and/or
activation profile.
In some embodiments, the methods of the present invention may be useful to aid or
assist in the identification of the response of a cancer such as, e.g., a logical
malignancy, to treatment with an anticancer drug. In other embodiments, the methods of the
present invention may be useful for improving the identification of the response of a cancer
such as, e.g., a hematological malignancy, to treatment with an anticancer drug. In certain
embodiments, the method further or alternatively comprises the step of indicating that the
cancer is non-responsive to treatment with the anticancer drug when the level of sion
and/or activation detected for the oncogenic fusion n is not changed (e.g, not
substantially sed) compared to the reference expression and/or activation profile. In
further embodiments, one or more signal transduction molecules present in the cellular
2012/025491
extract are detected in addition to one or more oncogenic fusion proteins, and the cancer is
identified as responsive or non-responsive to treatment based on this ular profile.”
In still yet another aspect, the present ion provides a method for predicting the
response of a subject having cancer to treatment with an anticancer drug, the method
comprising:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer after administration of an anticancer drug, or
prior to incubation with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) determining a level of expression and/or activation (e.g., phosphorylation)
of an nic fusion protein in the cellular extract using an assay described herein; and
(d) predicting the likelihood that the subject will respond to treatment with the
anticancer drug by comparing the level of expression and/or activation detected for the
oncogenic fusion protein with a nce expression and/or activation profile generated in
the absence of the anticancer drug.
[0135] In a preferred embodiment, the method for predicting the response of a subject
having cancer to treatment with an anticancer drug comprises:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer after administration of an anticancer drug, or
prior to incubation with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) determining a level of expression and/or activation (e.g., phosphorylation)
of an oncogenic filsion protein in the cellular extract using an assay comprising a dilution
series of capture antibodies specific for the oncogenic fusion protein, wherein the capture
antibodies are restrained on a solid support;
(d) comparing the level of expression and/or tion detected for the
oncogenic fusion protein with a reference expression and/or activation profile generated in
the absence of the anticancer drug; and
(e) indicating that the subject will likely respond to ent with the
anticancer drug when the level of expression and/or activation ed for the oncogenic
fusion protein is changed (e.g., substantially decreased) compared to the reference expression
and/or tion profile.
In some embodiments, the s of the present ion may be useful to aid or
assist in the prediction of a subject’s hood of responding to treatment with an anticancer
drug for a cancer such as, e.g., a hematological malignancy. In other embodiments, the
methods of the present invention may be useful for improving the prediction of a subject’s
2012/025491
likelihood of ding to treatment with an anticancer drug for a cancer such as, e.g., a
hematological malignancy. In certain embodiments, the method further or alternatively
comprises the step of indicating that the subject will not likely respond to treatment with the
anticancer drug when the level of expression and/or activation detected for the oncogenic
fusion protein is not changed (e.g, not substantially decreased) ed to the reference
expression and/or activation profile. In further embodiments, one or more signal transduction
molecules t in the cellular extract are detected in on to one or more oncogenic
fusion proteins, and the likelihood that the subject will respond to treatment is ted
based on this “molecular profile.”
[0137] In a r aspect, the present ion provides a method for determining r
a subject having cancer is resistant to treatment with an anticancer drug, the method
comprising:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer after administration of an anticancer drug, or
prior to incubation with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the ed cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) determining a level of expression and/or tion (e.g., phosphorylation)
of an oncogenic fusion protein in the cellular extract using an assay described herein; and
(d) determining whether the subject is resistant or sensitive to treatment with
the anticancer drug by comparing the level of expression and/or activation detected for the
oncogenic fusion protein with a reference expression and/or activation profile generated in
the absence of the anticancer drug or in the presence of the anticancer drug at an earlier time.
In a preferred embodiment, the method for ining whether a subject having
cancer is resistant to treatment with an anticancer drug comprises:
(a) isolating cells of a cancer after stration of an anticancer drug, or
prior to incubation with an anticancer drug;
(b) lysing the isolated cells to produce a cellular extract;
(c) determining a level of expression and/or activation (e.g., phosphorylation)
of an oncogenic filSlOI‘l protein in the cellular extract using an assay comprising a dilution
series of capture antibodies specific for the oncogenic fusion protein, wherein the capture
antibodies are restrained on a solid support;
(d) comparing the level of expression and/or activation detected for the
oncogenic fusion protein with a reference expression and/or tion profile generated in
the absence of the anticancer drug or in the presence of the anticancer drug at an earlier time;
(e) ting that the subject is resistant to ent with the anticancer drug
when the level of expression and/or activation detected for the nic fusion protein is not
changed (e.g., not substantially decreased) compared to the reference expression and/or
activation profile.
In some embodiments, the s of the present invention may be useful to aid or
assist in the identification of a subject having cancer who is resistant to treatment with an
anticancer drug or in the determination of whether a subject having cancer is resistant to
treatment with an anticancer drug, wherein the subject has a cancer such as, e.g., a
logical ancy. In other embodiments, the methods of the present invention may
be useful for improving the identification of a subject having cancer who is ant to
treatment with an anticancer drug or the determination of whether a subject having cancer is
resistant to treatment with an anticancer drug, wherein the subject has a cancer such as, e.g., a
hematological malignancy.
In certain embodiments, the method further or alternatively comprises the step of
indicating that the subject is ive to treatment with the anticancer drug when the level of
expression and/or activation (e.g., phosphorylation) detected for the oncogenic fusion protein
is changed (e.g., substantially decreased) compared to the reference expression or activation
profile. Non-limiting examples of reasons why a subject having cancer would be resistant to
treatment with an anticancer drug include the presence of one or more mutations in the
oncogenic fusion protein of st (e.g, BCR—ABL), non-compliance with the therapeutic
regimen, and/or administration of a suboptimal drug dose. With regard to a suboptimal drug
dose of the anticancer drug, the method can further comprise the step of increasing the next
or subsequent dose of the ncer drug administered to the subject. In fiarther
ments, one or more signal transduction molecules present in the cellular extract are
detected in addition to one or more oncogenic filSlOIl proteins, and the subject is identified as
resistant or sensitive to treatment based on this “molecular .”
V. Oncogenic Fusion Proteins
In particular embodiments, expression/activation profiling of one or more oncogenic
fusion proteins, alone or in combination with expression/activation ng of substrates
thereof and/or other signal transduction pathway proteins can be performed on cell s
ed using the apparatuses and methods of the present invention, e.g., to determine the
efficacy of tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy for ts in need thereof (e.g., patients with a
BCR—ABL mediated disease such as chronic myelogenous leukemia). The oncogenic fusion
ns and other analytes are ageously interrogated in cell lysates prepared by the
apparatuses and methods of the invention without changing the intracellular concentration of
the tyrosine kinases tor.
In certain embodiments, translocations in human tumors that cause the formation of
oncogenic fusion proteins and their associated neoplasms include, but are not limited to, the
following:
Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML): Philadelphia chromosome is a
translocation which results in BCIVABL (kinase).
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL): Chimeric oncogenic proteins include:
ECytogenetic translocation] Molecular genetic abnormality %
cryptic t(12;21) TEL/AMLl (kinase) i25.4%
"88518388888818; """"""""""""588855885585""""""""""""""""888
"8885838888855""""""""""""55858558888885885)18/
"88888138885888; """"""""""""8855285888888"""""""""""""""""18%
"88881838888888; """"""""""5858885888888"""""""""""""""""""""""
"881' i 8 1858818888 13"""""""""""5558555888 ' 888888"""""""""""""""""""""
Burkitt’s ma: c-myc gene translocation t(8;l4)(q24;q32). The most
common chimeric oncoprotein is c-myc/IGH.
AML: ocation of a part of chromosome 8 to chromosome 21 The resulting
ic oncoprotein is ETO. Another translocation t(12; 15)(pl3;q25) results in the
TEL/TrkC (kinase) chimeric oncoprotein.
Ewing a: ocation between chromosomes 11 and 22. The resulting
chimeric oncoprotein is EWS/FLI cription factor).
DFSP: Over 95% of DFSP tumors have the somal translocation t(l7;22),
which results in the chimeric oncoprotein COLlAl/PDGF (binds and activates PDGFR).
[0149] Acute promyelocytic leukemia: a translocation denoted as t(15;l7)(q22;q12). The
resulting chimeric oncoprotein is RARu/PML (transcription complex protein).
Pro-B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia: translocation t(l7;l9), which results in
the chimeric otein E2A/HLF (apoptosis inhibitor).
Acute pre-B-cell leukemia: ocation t(l;l9). The ic oncoprotein is
E2A/Pbxl (kinase substrate).
Rhabdomyosarcoma : ocation of t(2: l3)(q35;ql4), which results in the
chimeric oncoprotein PAX3/FKHR (transcription factor).
[0153] A soft tissue malignancy of very young children: t(l2;15)(pl3;q25) rearrangement
which s in the following chimeric oncoprotein: protein tyrosine kinase ETV6/NTRK3
(kinase).
Papillary thyroid carcinoma: the chimeric oncoprotein is RET/PTC (kinase).
Prostate cancer: the chimeric oncoprotein is ERG (kinase).
[0156] Additional examples of translocations in human tumors that cause the formation of
oncogenic fusion proteins and their associated neoplasms:
Adapted mm .M. ooper,0ncogenes,2n e .
Bartlett, 1995.
VI. Examples
The following examples are offered to illustrate, but not to limit, the claimed
invention.
Example 1. Exemplary Cell Isolation Apparatuses.
This example bes exemplary cell isolation apparatuses for the tion of
leukocytes from patient whole blood using a filtration method. Embodiments and aspects of
a cell isolation apparatus of the present invention are depicted in 6.
The cell isolation apparatus of the t ion is used to separate red blood
cells from other cells present in whole blood. In particular, leukocytes and/or circulating
tumor cells are separated from significant numbers of red blood cells and plasma present in
whole blood. The cell isolation apparatus of the present invention comprises a filtration
device and a collection vessel. The filtration device is an assembly comprising an upper
chamber, a lower chamber and one or more (e.g., a plurality of two, three, four, five, six,
seven, eight, nine, ten, or more) stacked filter membranes between the upper and lower
chambers. The upper and lower chambers can be manufactured from materials such as, but
not limited to, polypropylene and polystyrene. In certain embodiments, the filter membrane
has a pore size of 8 um and a thickness of 355.6-558.8 um, and has a leukocyte retention
yield of 70-80%. A non-limiting example of a filter membrane includes White Blood Cell
Isolation (Leukosorb) Medium (PALL Cat. No. BSP0669).
lly, 1 ml of patient blood treated with protease inhibitors and phosphatase
inhibitors is loaded into the upper r of the cell ion tus. The unit is
centrifuged for 5-30 minutes at 00 rpms (e.g., 800 rpms) at 4°C in a tabletop centrifuge
such as an Allegra 6R centrifuge (Beckman), Sorvall Legend fuge (Thermo Scientific),
or Heraeus Megafuge centrifuge (Kendro). In certain instances, the first collection vessel
containing the red blood cells is removed from the cell isolation apparatus and a second
collection vessel is attached. Without washing steps, 200 ul—l ml of lysis buffer is added to
the upper chamber of the filtration device. The upper chamber is capped and the filtration
device and second collection vessel are shaken vigorously for 15-30 minutes at 4°C. The
filtration device and second collection vessel are placed in a centrifuge and spun at about
3,000 rpm for about 5 minutes. The cell lysate can be transferred to another vessel for
e at -70°C.
In other instances, the first collection vessel containing the red blood cells is
removed from the cell isolation apparatus and the filtration device containing the filter
membranes is embled. The upper chamber and the lower chamber are unscrewed to
separate them. Using s, the filter membranes containing the separated leukocytes are
placed in a second collection vessel containing lysis . Non-limiting examples of a
second collection vessel e 1.5 ml and 2 ml microcentrifuge tubes. In some instances,
the second tion vessel is further incubated at 4°C for at least 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 60, or
120 minutes, preferably between about 15 to about 30 minutes. In other instances, the second
collection vessel is placed on ice and briefly vortexed for 10 seconds every 10 minutes for a
total of 30 minutes. In some embodiments, the cell lysate is stored at -70°C. In other
ments, the vessel containing the lysate is fuged to remove the filter membranes
WO 54257
and cell fragments. The supernatant of the cell lysate is transferred to another tube for
storage at -70°C.
In yet another embodiment, the cell isolation apparatus comprises a tube filter unit
and a collection vessel (). The tube filter unit comprises a cylindrical tube affixed at
one end with one or more (e.g., a plurality of two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten,
or more) filter membranes, wherein the membranes are able to retain healthy and malignant
leukocytes and/or circulating tumor cells from whole blood s. In particular ces,
the filter nes are (e.g., 2, 3, or 4) layers of filters such as PALL filters (e.g.,
Leukosorb Medium). In certain instances, each filter has a pore size of 8 um, a thickness of
3556-5588 um, and a leukocyte retention yield of 70-80%. In n instances, the tube
filter unit is attached to a collection vessel by way of a plastic adapter. The filter membrane
of the tube filter unit is securely attached to the adapter which is positioned in the opening of
a collection tube. Examples of collection vessels include, but are not limited to, 3 ml, 5 ml, 8
ml, 14 ml and 16 ml plastic culture tubes. In certain embodiments, 1 ml of patient whole
blood treated with protease inhibitors and phosphatase inhibitors is loaded into the top of the
tube filter unit of the cell isolation apparatus. The apparatus is centrifuged for 5-30 minutes
at 600-2000 rpms (e.g., 800 rpms) at 4°C in a tabletop centrifuge such as an Allegra 6R
centrifuge (Beckman), Sorvall Legend centrifuge (Thermo Scientific), or Heraeus Megafuge
fuge (Kendro). In certain instances, the collection tube containing the red blood cells is
d from the cell isolation apparatus and a new collection tube is ed. Without
washing steps, 200 ul-l ml of lysis buffer is added to the opening of the tube filter unit of the
cell isolation apparatus. The apparatus is sealed or capped, and then shaken vigorously for
-30 minutes at 4°C. The cell isolation apparatus is centrifuged and spun at about 3000 rpm
for about 5 minutes in a tabletop filge. The cell lysate can then be transferred from the
collection vessel to another vessel for e at -70°C.
In still yet another embodiment, the cell isolation apparatus of the present ion
comprises a plurality of filtration devices or tube filter units and a multi-well or multi-tube
collection vessel. tion devices and tube filter units described above can be attached to
wells of a multi-format plate, such as a 12- well 24- well, 48-well, or 96-well plate.
Example 2. Protocol for Tumor Cell Isolation From CML Patient Blood By Filtration
Method Using Cell Isolation Apparatus.
This e details the protocol used to isolate and harvest CML tumor cells in
individual patient whole blood using a method of the present invention. The whole blood
from patient can be in vitro d or non- treated with BCR-ABL inhibitors prior to
isolation.
y drawn blood sample are best for isolation of tumor cells. If fresh samples
cannot be obtained, blood samples can be processed within 1-3 days after being drawn.
Samples collected in EDTA (Becton Dickenson cat. no. #366643, EDTA (K2) sterile tubes)
are sent to for processing the day they are drawn. Samples must be kept at room temperature
prior to processing. It is important to avoid refrigerating or freezing the samples at this point.
The blood sample received in EDTA tubes (BD #366643) is treated with protease
and phosphatase inhibitors. The tube of blood is mixed gently by slowly inverting 4-6 times,
and then 0.05 mL of a protease and phosphatase inhibitor cocktail per lmL blood is added.
At this point in the protocol, tumor and white blood cells can be isolated from the blood
sample by proceeding to the section of this e entitled “Isolation and lysis of tumor and
white blood cells”. Optionally, the blood sample can be treated with a drug prior to
proceeding to that section.
Drug treatment of t blood samples
The drug such as a BCR-ABL inhibitor are diluted in Hank’s Balanced Saline
Solution (HBSS) before it is added to the blood sample. 1.0 mL of the patient’s blood sample
is placed into a culture tube. The desired concentration of drug is added to each aliquot of the
patient’s blood. For ce, 10 ul, 1 ul or 0.1 ul that correspond to a drug tration of
10 uM, 1 uM or 0.1 uM is added to a tube. One milliliter (1 ml) of untreated blood in a
separate tube can be used as a control. The tubes are then incubated fro 4 hours at 37°C in a
C02 incubator. Afterwards, the drug treated sample can be fiarther sed ing to the
procedure of the next section in order to e and lyse the tumor and white blood cells of
the sample.
Isolation and lysis of tumor and white blood cells
Gently mix the blood sample to be added to the filtration device by slowly inverting
the tube 4-6 times. Using a 1ml pipette, load lmL of the blood sample to the upper chamber
of the filtration device that is housed in a collection tube. After the sample has been ,
snap close the filtration device. The cell isolation apparatus is place in an Allegra 6R
centrifuge and centrifuged for 15 minutes at 1,000 rpms at 4°C. After centrifugation, the cell
isolation apparatus is removed from the centrifuge. The first collection tube that contains the
red blood cells is removed from the ion unit and replaced with a second, clean
WO 54257
collection tube. The first collection tube containing blood is capped for safety and kept at
room temperature for later use.
200 uL of lysis buffer (kept on ice) is added to the upper chamber of the filtration
device containing the membrane with the white blood cells, and then the unit is snapped
closed. The cell isolation apparatus is placed on a shaking ing) platform that is kept at
4°C. The shaking platform along with the cell isolation apparatus undergoes three cycles
comprising of shaking for 2 minutes and then resting 5 minutes per cycle. Next, the cell
isolation apparatus is centrifuged at 2,000rpm for 10 minutes at 4°C. The cell lysate located
in the second collection tube is transferred to a 2mL centrifugation tube with a lmL pipette
for use in CEER immunoassays such as the BCR-ABL assay and other pathway marker
assay. ally, the cell lysate is stored at -70°C.
Example 3. Leukocyte Isolation And Harvesting By tion Method From Whole
Blood Without Dilution Of Anticancer Drug.
The example illustrates a protocol for the isolation and lysis of leukocytes from
patient whole blood using a filtration method. In addition to normal, healthy leukocytes,
malignant leukocytes such as chronic enous leukemia (CML) tumor cells from whole
blood can be isolated without diluting drug concentrations and without interfering ties
of contaminating red blood cells. In certain ments, whole blood from a patient can be
in vitro treated or non-treated with one or more tyrosine kinase inhibitors (e.g, ib
mesylate (Gleevec®), nilotinib (Tasigna®), nib el®), bosutinib (SKI-606),
gef1tinib (Iressa®), sunitinib (Sutent®), erlotinib (Tarceva®), lapatinib (GW-5720l6;
Tykerb®), canertinib (CI 1033), semaxinib (SU54l6), nib (PTK787/ZK222584),
sorafenib (BAY 43-9006; Nexavar®), leflunomide (SUlOl), anib (ZACTIMATM;
ZD6474), ponatinib (AP24534), and combinations thereof) prior to isolation. c
myelogenous leukemia is a cancer of the white blood cells. It is a form of leukemia
characterized by the increased and unregulated growth of predominantly myeloid cells in the
bone marrow and the accumulation of these cells in the blood. Therefore, determining the
level of oncogenic s in CML tumors in patients by extracting tumor cells along with
leukocytes away from significant numbers of red blood cells and plasma in the blood
becomes critical for diagnostic and prognostic tions. This example describes a
filtration method that enables the recovery of leukocytes and/or circulating tumor cells from
patient blood without dilution of anticancer drug.
Typically, patient blood is drawn into blood collection tubes containing EDTA or
other anticoagulants and mixed gently by inversion. The blood sample is stored at room
temperature and processed within 24-72 hours, and is typically not refrigerated or frozen.
The tube containing the whole blood is mixed by gentle inversion up and down and treated
with a solution mixture comprising protease inhibitors and atase inhibitors. The
solution mixture can comprise sodium orthovanadate (200 mM, at a final tration of
2mM), Sigma Protease Inhibitor (50x; at a final concentration of lx), and Halt Phosphatase
Inhibitor (100x; at a final concentration of 2x) and is admixed with the t’s blood
. Examples of protease inhibitors and phosphatase inhibitors include, but are not
limited to, Halt Protease and Phosphatase Inhibitor Cocktail a ific); complete
ULTRA and PhosSTOP (Roche Applied Science); Protease Inhibitor Set (EMD Chemicals);
and Phosphatase Inhibitor Cocktail Set I-IV (EMD Chemicals).
A cell isolation apparatus is used to te the red blood cells from other cells
such as leukocytes and/or circulating tumor cells in patient blood sample. The cell isolation
apparatus comprises a filtration device and a collection vessel as illustrated. In certain
aspects, the filtration device is assembled by inserting one or more (e.g., a plurality of two,
three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, or more) leukocyte-retaining filter membranes
between the upper chamber and the lower chamber of the filtration device. The filter
membrane can have a pore size of 8 um, a thickness of 3556-5588 um, and a leukocyte
retention yield of 70-80%. A non-limiting example of a filter membrane es White
Blood Cell Isolation (Leukosorb) Medium (PALL Cat. No. BSP0669). The led
filtration device is placed on top of a collection vessel. The cell isolation apparatus is
uncapped before the blood sample is loaded into it. Examples of tion vessels include,
but are not limited to, tubes such as plastic culture tubes having a ty of 3 ml, 5 ml, 8
ml, 14 ml, or 16 ml.
An exemplary method of isolating and lysing leukocytes and/or circulating tumor
cells from a patient’s blood sample includes the following steps. 1 ml of blood sample pre-
treated with protease inhibitors and phosphatase inhibitors is gently mixed by inversion.
Next, 1 ml of the blood sample is loaded into the upper chamber of the cell isolation
apparatus as assembled as described above. The cell isolation apparatus is placed into a
clinical or tabletop centrifuge, such as an Allegra 6R centrifuge (Beckman), Sorvall Legend
centrifuge (Thermo Scientific), or s Megafuge centrifuge (Kendro). Typically, the
cells are centrifuged for 5-30 minutes at 000 rpms (e.g., 800 rpms) at 4°C. Adaptors
can be used during centrifiJgation to secure the cell isolation apparatus into the centrifuge
rotor. After centrifilgation, the cell ion apparatus is removed from the centrifuge and
the ion device is separated from the collection vessel which contains red blood cells that
WO 54257
have passed through the filtration device. The collection vessel with the red blood cells can
be capped for biosafety and set aside.
In certain embodiments, a new collection vessel, such as, but not d to, another
collection tube or a microcentrifuge tube is placed under the filtration device. Without the
addition of wash steps, 200 111-1 ml of lysis buffer is added to the upper chamber of the
filtration . The upper chamber is capped and the filtration device and new collection
vessel are shaken vigorously for 15-30 minutes at 4°C. The filtration device and new
collection vessel are placed in a fuge such as a microcentrifuge and spun at about 3,000
rpm for about 5 minutes. The cell lysate can be transferred to another centrifuge vessel such
as a microcentrifuge tube for storage at -70°C.
In another embodiment, after the cell isolation apparatus is removed from the
centrifuge and the filtration device is separated from the collection tube containing the red
blood cells, the one or a plurality of filter membranes between the upper and lower chambers
of the filtration device are isolated. The upper and lower rs are detached (e.g.,
unscrewed) and the filter membranes are isolated using forceps. The membranes are placed
into a new collection vessel, such as a 1.5 ml or 2.0 ml entrifuge tube, containing 1 ml
of cell lysis buffer. To lyse the cells on the filter membranes, the new collection vessel is
ed immediately. The vessel is then placed on ice and briefly vortexed for 10 seconds
every 10 minutes for a total of 30 minutes. The cell lysate is then transferred into another
vessel, such as a 1.5 ml or 2.0 ml entrifuge tube and stored at -70°C.
Example 4. Isolation of Cells By Filtration Method Using a 96-well Cell Isolation
Apparatus.
This example demonstrates the ry of isolated cells from a sample such as, for
example, whole blood, serum, plasma, urine, sputum, bronchial lavage fluid, tears, nipple
aspirate, lymph, saliva, and/or fine needle aspirate (FNA) using a filtration method or a
filtration method in conjunction with magnetic bead capture, wherein the isolated cells can be
used in the present invention to detect the activation state and/or total amount of one or a
plurality of oncogenic filSlOI‘l proteins (e.g., BCR-ABL) and/or signal transduction molecules
(e.g, EGFR, HER-2, HER-3, HER-4, VEGFR-l, 2, VEGFR—3, PDGFR, c-Met, c-
KIT, IGF-IR, SHC, PI3K, etc). In particular, this example demonstrates the recovery of
K562 cells (i.e., cells from a human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line) from blood
spiked with K562 cells using a filtration method alone or a filtration method after ic
bead capture with anti-CD45 antibodies, followed by the preparation of a K562 cell lysate
and determination of the expression and/or tion status of one or more oncogenic fusion
proteins (e.g., L), substrates thereof, pathways f, or combinations thereof.
This example also demonstrates the recovery of a subset of blood cells (i.e., leukocytes) from
patient blood s using either a filtration method or a filtration method prior to magnetic
bead capture with anti-CD45 antibodies, followed by the preparation of a cell lysate and
determination of the expression and/or activation status of one or more oncogenic fusion
proteins (e.g., BCR—ABL), substrates thereof, pathways thereof, or combinations thereof. By
eliminating the need for any wash steps after t sample collection and cell isolation, the
methods described herein are advantageous because cells of interest can be recovered from
blood without changing the intracellular concentration of an anticancer drug such as a
tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Contrary to the art, the s described in this example e
cell lysates from recovered cells without ntial dilution of an anticancer drug such as a
tyrosine kinase inhibitor (e.g., Gleevec®, Tasigna®, Sprycel®, eta).
A 96-well cell isolation plate can be prepared to isolate leukocytes and/or K562
cells from fresh collected blood. First, the original membrane from a 96-well filtration plate
can be removed and replaced with filter membranes (e.g., LeukoLOCK (Life Technologies),
Acroprep (PALL) and Leukosorb (PALL)). In these embodiments, fresh ted blood with
or without spiked K562 cells can be loaded into wells of a 96-well cell isolation plate. A
second 96-well microplate can serve as a blood waste collection plate and should be placed
under the cell isolation plate with filter membranes. The plate assembly can be centrifuged at
room temperature for about 5 min at a speed ranging from about 600 rpm to 3,000rpm, such
as e. g., about 600 rpm, 1,000 rpm, 2,000 rpm, and 3,000 rpm. After centrifugation, the filter
membrane can be transferred to a centrifugation tube and the cells on the filter membrane can
be treated with a volume of lysis buffer (e.g., 300 ul of lysis buffer) and vortexed briefly and
immediately in order to lyse the cells. The centrifugation tube containing the cell lysate can
be placed on ice for about 30 min and subjected to brief vortexing about every 10 s.
The tube can be centrifuged for about 15 minutes to separate the ar debris from the
supernatant. The supernatant containing the lysate can be collected and analyzed by
microarray such as a proximity-mediated immunoassay to detect nic fusion ns
(e.g., BCR—ABL) and/or signal transduction molecules (e.g., EGFR, HER-2, HER-3, HER-4,
l, VEGFR—2, VEGFR—3, PDGFR, c-Met, c-KIT, IGF-IR, SHC, PI3K, eta).
The fresh collected blood with or without spiked K562 cells can undergo the
filtration method for cell isolation described herein after initial processing by ic bead
capture with anti-CD45 dies. Fresh collected blood with or without spiked K562 cells
can be incubated with washed magnetic beads coupled with anti-CD45 antibodies (e.g.,
CD45 Dynalbeads (Invitrogen)). Washed magnetic beads can be ed according to the
manufacturer’s instructions. For example, the procedure may include the following steps: 1)
transfer 100ul of magnetic beads coupled to anti-CD45 antibodies to a 1.5ml centrifuge tube;
2) add 1ml of buffer and mix gently; 3) place the centrifuge tube on the magnet for 1 min; 4)
remove supernatant; and 5) remove the tube from the magnet and resuspend the magnetic
beads in 100ul of buffer. In particular instances, 10001 of the washed beads can be added to
each of the K562 spiked blood s. The samples can then be incubated on a rotator in a
cold room at 4°C or at room temperature for about 20 mins to 2 hours. The incubation time
may be, e.g, at least 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 1.5 hours or 2 hours. Next, the samples
can be placed on the magnet (e.g., DynaMag ). The supernatant can be collected and
loaded into the wells of a 96-well cell isolation plate. The method for cell isolation by
filtration can be performed as described above.
A subset of blood cells (e.g., leukocytes) can be isolated from fresh collected CML
patient blood s by the filtration method described . In ular instances,
blood samples can be collected from CML patients taking tyrosine kinase inhibitors (e.g.,
imatinib mesylate (Gleevec®), nib (Tasigna®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-
606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib (Sutent®), erlotinib (Tarceva®), lapatinib (GW-572016;
Tykerb®), canertinib (C1 1033), semaxinib (SU54l6), vatalanib 7/ZK222584),
nib (BAY 43-9006; Nexavar®), leflunomide (SU101), vandetanib (ZACTIMATM;
ZD6474), and combinations thereof). An advantage of the present invention is that the blood
samples from patients, including those from patients receiving tyrosine kinase therapy, do not
require additional washing or processing. Similarly as described above, a 96-well cell
isolation plate can be prepared by removing the original membrane from a 96-well filtration
plate and replacing it with a ne filter (e.g, LeukoLOCK (Life Technologies) or
Acroprep (PALL)) able to capture blood cells of interest (e.g., leukocytes). Fresh collected
blood from a CML patient can be loaded into wells of a 96-well cell ion plate, and a
second 96-well microplate can be placed under the cell isolation plate with filter membranes.
The plate assembly can be centrifuged at room temperature for about 5 min at a speed
ranging from about 600 rpm to 3,000 rpm, such as, e.g., about 600 rpm, 1,000 rpm,
2,000rpm, and pm. After centrifilgation, the filter ne can be transferred to a
centrifugation tube. To lyse the cells, about 30001 of lysis buffer can be added to the tube
and then the tube can be vortexed briefly. The tube ning the cell lysate can be placed
on ice for about 30 min and subjected to brief vortexing about every 10 minutes. The tube
can be centrifuged for about 15 minutes to separate the cellular material from the supernatant.
The supernatant containing the lysate can be collected and analyzed by a microarray assay
such as a proximity-mediated immunoassay described .
Fresh collected blood from a CML patient can be initially processed by magnetic
bead capture with anti-CD45 antibodies prior to the filtration method for cell isolation
described herein. In certain embodiments, washed magnetic beads coupled with anti-CD45
antibodies (e.g., CD45 Dynalbeads (Invitrogen)) can be incubated with blood collected from
CML patients. Washed magnetic beads can be prepared according to the manufacturer’s
instructions, for example, the procedure may include the following steps: 1) er lOOul of
magnetic beads coupled to D45 antibodies to a 1.5ml centrifuge tube; 2) Add lml of
buffer and mix gently; 3) place the centrifuge tube on the magnet for l min; 4) remove
atant; and 5) remove the tube from the magnet and resuspend the magnetic beads in
lOOul of buffer. In particular instances, lOOul of the washed beads can be added to each of
the K562 spiked blood samples. The samples can then be incubated on a rotator in a cold
room at 4°C or at room temperature for about 20 mins to 2 hours. The incubation time may
be, e. g., at least 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 15 hours or 2 hours. Next, the samples can
be placed on the magnet. The atant can be ted and loaded into the wells of a 96-
well cell ion plate. The method for cell isolation by filtration can be performed as
described above.
illustrates that both total and phosphorylated BCR-ABL can be ed and
measured in cell lysates prepared from K562 cells isolated from blood samples spiked with
K562 cells and by using the leukocyte filtration method of the present invention.
shows that the levels of total BCR-ABL in cells following filtration were similar to levels
observed in unfiltered samples. Additionally, shows that the levels of
phosphorylated BCR-ABL in K562 cells after filtration were comparable to the levels
ed in essed cells.
-B illustrate that both total and phosphorylated BCR-ABL levels were
detected and measured in cell lysates, wherein the cell lysates were prepared from blood
samples spiked with K562 cells, ed through filtration membranes, and analyzed by
microarray such as a proximity assay such as a Collaborative Proximity Immunoassay
(COPIA) described in PCT Application No. 2010/042182, filed July 15, 2010, and
US Patent ation Nos. 20080261829, 20090035792, and 20100167945, the disclosures
of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes. In particular,
,000 cells isolated by the methods described herein were used in a BCR-ABL CEER assay.
The percentage recovery of total and phosphorylated BCR-ABL in different samples that
were centrifuged at various speeds was compared. shows that there was a 141.55%
ry of total BCR-ABL signal in isolated K562 cells following the cell isolation method
of the present invention that includes a filtration apparatus with PALL filter membranes and a
centrifugation step at a speed of 600 rpm. In ison, when the cell isolation method
included LeukoLock filter nes and a centrifugation step at a speed of 600 rpm, the
total L signal ry was 128.88%. Notably, the percentage ry decreased
to 62.71% when the centrifugation speed was increased to 1,000 rpm. shows the
percentage recovery of phosphorylated BCR—ABL signal in cells isolated from 1 ml blood
samples spiked with K562 cells and by using the methods of the present invention. 63.60%
of the phosphorylated BCR-ABL signal was detected in K562 cells isolated using the
filtration method that included isolating cells with the PALL filtration membrane and
centrifilging the filtration apparatus at 600rpm. 59.64% of the phosphorylated BCR-ABL
signal was ed in K562 cells isolated using the filtration method that ed isolating
cells with the LeukoLOCK filtration membrane and centrifuging the filtration apparatus at
1,000rpm. When the centrifiJgation speed was decreased to 600rpm, the percentage recovery
decreased to 57.89% with the LeukoLock membrane.
rates that phosphorylated BCR-ABL levels were detected and
measured in cell lysates ed from blood samples spiked with varying amounts of K562
cells, filtered through filtration membranes, and analyzed by microarray such as the
proximity-mediated immunoassay described herein. The methods of the present invention
were used to detect the levels of phospho-BCR—ABL in samples spiked with K562 cells. In
particular, the measured levels of orylated BCR-ABL relate to the number of K562
cells added to the blood samples. The percentage recovery of the phosphorylated BCR—ABL
signal was 123.32% for the sample spiked with 300,000 K562 cells, 75.21% for the sample
spiked with 100,000 K562 cells, 63.16% for the sample spiked with 30,000 K562 cells, and
159.12% for the sample spiked with 10,000 K562 cells.
rates the BCR-ABL signal in K562 cells recovered after filtration
when the cells are spiked in blood. The percentage ry of the phosphorylated BCR-
ABL signal was 63.60% for the sample spiked with 1,000,000 K562 cells and the total was
108.61%.
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e 5. Protocol for Tumor Cell Isolation From CML Patient Blood By Filtration
Method Using 96-well Cell Isolation Apparatus.
The example illustrates a protocol for the isolation and harvesting of chronic
myelogenous leukemia (CML) tumor cells from patient whole blood using a filtration
method. In a preferred embodiment, the whole blood from a patient can be in vitro treated or
non-treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (6.g. imatinib mesylate (Gleevec®), nilotinib
(Tasigna®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib (Sutent®),
erlotinib (Tarceva®), lapatinib (GW-572016; Tykerb®), canertinib (CI 1033), semaxinib
(SU54l6), nib (PTK787/ZK2225 84), sorafenib (BAY 6; Nexavar®), mide
(SUlOl), vandetanib (ZACTIMATM; ZD6474), ponatinib (AP24534), and combinations
thereof) prior to isolation. Chronic myelogenous leukemia is a cancer of the white blood
cells. It is a form of leukemia characterized by the increased and unregulated growth of
predominantly myeloid cells in the bone marrow and the accumulation of these cells in the
blood. 95% of CML cancer cells express BCR-ABL oncoprotein. Therefore, determining
the level of BCR—ABL in CML tumors in patients by ting tumor cells along with white
blood cells away from red blood cells in the blood becomes critical. This example describes
a filtration method that enables the recovery of tumor cells (e.g. ytes and other white
blood cells) from patient blood.
Typically, patient blood is drawn into blood collection tubes contain EDTA and
mixed gently by ion. The whole blood sample is stored at room ature and
processed within 24 hours. The filtration plate comprises a 96-well plate with a membrane at
the bottom of the well which can allow for the recovery of white blood cells (e.g., leukocytes)
from total blood. If a filtration plate is not cially available, the filtration plate can be
ed through a series of steps such as, but not limited to a) removing the original filter
membrane from a Whatman 96-well Unifilter plate; b) removing the LeukoLOCK Total RNA
filter membrane from its filter cartridge housing; c) punching a 0.25 inch diameter hole into
the LeukoLOCK Total RNA filter membrane so the newly created ne circles fit into a
well of the 96-well filtration plate; and d) gently g the new LeukoLOCK Total RNA
filter membrane circles into the Whatman 96-well Unifilter plate without its original
membrane. Next, a 96-well microplate is placed under the 96-well ion plate and both
plates are sealed together with tape to form a filtration plate duet. The 96-well microplate
serves to collect the pass-through blood.
The filtration method can include the following steps. A patient blood sample is
mixed with a lml pipette by pipetting up and down for 5-10 times. Using a lml pipette, 300
[11 of patient blood is loaded into a well of the pre-made 96-well filtration plate duet. The
plate duet is centrifuged in a table-top centrifuge (e.g., Allegra 6R (Beckman r)) for 5
minutes at 3,000 rpm at room temperature. After centrifugation, the plate duet is removed
from the fuge. The tape is d and the plates of the plate duet are separated.
Using 114 mm (41/ ”) dissecting forceps, the LeukoLOCK filter membrane circle is removed
from the well of the filtration plate and placed into a 2 ml centrifugation tube containing 300
[11 of protein lysis . Next, the centrifilgation tube is ed immediately. The
centrifugation tube is placed on ice and briefly vortexed for 10 seconds every 10 minutes for
a total of 30 minutes. The lysate is transferred into a new 2 ml centrifugation tube using a
1ml pipette. At this point, the lysate is be stored at -70°C or used in an assay that detects the
activation state and/or total amount of one or a plurality of oncogenic fusion proteins (e.g.,
BCR-ABL) and/or signal uction molecules (e.g., EGFR, HER-2, HER-3, HER-4,
VEGFR—l, 2, VEGFR—3, PDGFR, c-Met, c-KIT, IGF-IR, SHC, PI3K, eta).
The filtration method can also include the ing steps. A patient blood sample
is treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors prior to filtration to recover tumor cells (6.g.
leukocytes and other white blood cells) from patient blood. In particular instances, 1.2 ml of
fresh collected t blood is transferred to a culture tube and specific concentration ranges
of tyrosine kinase inhibitor drugs are added, such as 10 uM, 1 uM or 0.1 uM Dasatinib; 10
uM, 1 uM or 0.1 uM Imatinib; and 10 uM, 1 uM or 0.1 uM Nilotinib. The blood is
incubated for about 1 to 24 hours (e.g., 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, or 24 hours) at
37°C in a C02 incubator or at room temperature.
Example 6. Protocol for CEER Immuno-Microarray for Determining Phospho-BCR-
ABL, Total BCR-ABL and BCR levels from Patient 2’s Blood Samples from the First
and Second Blood Draws.
[0189] This example illustrates a procedure for ming a CEER Immuno-Microarray to
detect the expression and activation of BCR-ABL in a patient’s blood sample. Leukocytes
and circulating tumor cells are isolated according to the methods described herein. The
isolated cells are lysed and used in a proximity assay such as a Collaborative Proximity
Immunoassay (COPIA) described in PCT Application No. , filed July
15, 2010, and US Patent Publication Nos. 20080261829, 20090035792, and 20100167945,
the disclosures of which are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all es.
In particular ments, the protocol includes treating the patient’s blood sample with
magnetic beads that bind BCR.
on of K562 Cell Lysate for CEER Immuno-Microarray.
Untreated K562 cell lysates were prepared according to the methods of the t
invention, such as described in Examples 2 and 3. Serial dilutions of untreated K462 cell
lysates in Assay Dilution Buffer were performed according to Table 1. The cell lysates were
screened by three CEER .
Table 1
Final concentration Vol. of Assay
Vol. of K562 cells # of cells/80 ul
of cells Dilution Buffer
125 ce11s/ ul 10 ul (5,617 ce11s/ ul) 440 ul 10,000
37.5 ce11s/ ul 135 ul (125 cells/ ul) 315 ul 3,000
12.5 ce11s/ ul 135 ul (37.5 ce11s/ ul) 270 ul 1,000
0 cells/ ul 450 ul
Dilution of Cell Lysate from Patient Blood Sample for CEER Immuno-Microarray.
Cell lysates prepared from patient blood samples were prepared according to the
s of the present invention, such as described in Examples 1, 2 and 10. The ure
of diluting patient cell lysate for use with three CEER slides is illustrated in Table 2.
Table 2
Vol. of Assay
Vol. of lysate Vol. to remove after dilution f
Dilution Buffer
1:25 dilution 160 ul pooled patient 150 ul (incubate with 150 ul of
of lysate cell lysate beads; 1:5)
1:5 dilution of 150 ul of 1:25
lysate dilution
1:10 dilution 150 ul (incubate with 150 ul of
75 ul 0f1:2.5 dilution
of lysate beads; 1:20)
1:20 dilution 150 ulof1:10
of lysate dilution
Procedure for CEER Immuno-Microarray.
1. Blocking slide:
1.1. Rinse the slide 2X with TBST.
1.2. Block the slide with 80ul of protein-free (TBS) Blocking Buffer for 1
1.3. Wash 2X with TBST, after blocking step.
1.4. Add 10ul of 1mM Na3V04 per ml ofAssay Dilution Buffer
(2%BSA/0. 1% triton/10mM EDTA/ TBS).
2. Incubation with cell lysate:
2.1. Perform serial dilution of cell lysate with Assay Dilution Buffer as
described in Tables ## and ##.
2.2. Remove an aliquot of the cell lysate for incubation with beads and add
an equivalent volume of Assay Dilution Buffer to the aliquots of lysate
that will not be ted with ic beads (e. g., BCR-1684 beads).
2.3. Add 80ul of cell lysate to the slide and seal the slide.
2.4. Incubate overnight at room temperature.
2.5. Wash the slide 5X such that the first wash is a quick rinse with 1.25ml
TBST and the remaining washes are for 3 minutes each.
3. Incubation with ion antibody:
3.1. Dilute the labeled antibodies to the appropriate concentrations in Assay
Dilution Buffer.
3.1.1 4G10-HRP: dilute 1:320 (Millipore # 05-777)
3.1.2 BCR-GO-AF5129: dilute 1:80 and 1:160 (R&D # AF5129)
3.1.3 Abl-HRP-AF5414: dilute 1:900 (R&D # AF5414)
3.1.4 BCR-HRP-l684-B-Dextran: dilute 1:80 (Epitomics # 1684-B)
3.1.5 GO-Dextran: dilute 1:80
3.2. Add 80ul of dy solution to the appropriate slide and incubate for
2 hours at room ature.
3.2.1 For Free BCR slide: BCR-HRP 1:80, GO-Dextran 1:80.
3.2.2 For Total BCR-ABL slide: Abl-HRP 1:900, BCR-GO 1:80.
3.2.3 For Phospho-BCR—ABL slide: 4G10-HRP 1:320, BCR-GO
1:160.
3.3. Wash the slide 5X such that the first wash is a quick rinse with 1.25ml
TBST and the remaining washes are for 3 minutes each.
4. Tyramide mediated signal amplification:
4.1. Add 80 ul of biotin-tyramide at 1:320 on in 50 mM glucose/PBS
(for BCR-HRP+GO-Dextran).
4.2. Add 80 ul of biotin-tyramide at 6.25ug/mL in 50 mM glucose/PBS-RK
(for 4G10-HRP+ BCR-GO and ABL-HRP+ BCR-GO).
4.3. Incubate for 15 minutes in the dark.
4.4. Wash the slide 5x W such that the first wash is a quick rinse with
1.25ml TBST and the remaining washes are for 3 minutes each.
. Incubation with Alexa Fluor conjugated avidin:
5.1. Incubate with 80 ul of Streptavidin-Alexa 647 at 0.4ug/ml in Assay
Dilution Buffer (1 :4,000 dilution) for 40 minutes.
.2. Wash the slide 5x such that the first wash is a quick rinse with 1.25ml
TBST and the remaining washes are for 3 s each.
.3. Wash once with water.
5.4. Remove the frame and rinse the slide a couple of times with water.
.5. Centrifuge the slide at 1500 rpm in 50ml tube for 3 minutes.
6. Dry and scan slide on Perkin Elmer scanner at the appropriate laser
setting:
6.1. Dry the slide.
6.2. Scan the slide on Perkin Elmer r at the riate laser setting
6.3. Save images and scan sets to files and server.
Example 7. Method for Selecting an Anticancer Therapy for a Patient With a
Hematological Malignancy Characterized by Activated BCR—ABL Levels.
[0192] This example demonstrates a method for ing an anticancer therapy for a
patient with a BCR-ABL mediated diseases (e.g., chronic myelogenous leukemia). A patient
is previously untreated for a BCR—ABL mediated e and has not yet received drugs such
as tyrosine kinase inhibitors (e.g., imatinib mesylate (Gleevec®), nilotinib (Tasigna®),
dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib t®), erlotinib
(Tarceva®), lapatinib (GW-572016; Tykerb®), canertinib (CI 1033), semaxinib 6),
vatalanib (PTK787/ZK2225 84), sorafenib (BAY 43-9006; Nexavar®), leflunomide (SU101),
vandetanib (ZACTIMATM; ZD6474), ponatinib (AP24534), and combinations f). A
patient’s blood sample is drawn and incubated with different anticancer drugs at varying
dosages for 1.5 hours at 37°C. Following this in vitro drug treatment, leukocytes and/or
circulating tumor cells are recovered from the t blood. The isolated cells are lysed and
WO 54257
used in a ity assay such as a Collaborative Proximity Immunoassay (COPIA)
described in PCT Application No. l 82, filed July 15, 2010, and US Patent
Publication Nos. 20080261829, 20090035792, and 20100167945, the disclosures of which
are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all es. The pathway profiles,
based upon the expression/activation ng of analytes of signaling uction pathway
ns (e. g., BCR—ABL, BCR, ABL, CRKL, AKT, SRC) in the drug treated patient
samples, are determined in the presence of anticancer drugs. The profiles are used to select
an anticancer treatment regimen aimed at achieVing a positive clinically outcome.
As such, the present invention es a method for selecting an anticancer drug in
a subject haVing a hematological malignancy, the method comprising 1) measuring the
activation state level of BCR-ABL in an isolated cell from a sample from the subject, )
incubating the isolated cell with at least one ncer drug prior to initiation of treatment; 3)
measuring the activation state level of BCR-ABL in the incubated cells; and selecting a
course of treatment based upon the activation state level of BCR—ABL. The present ion
also provides a method for monitoring the efficacy of an anticancer drug in a subject, wherein
the subject has a hematological malignancy, the method comprising: 1) measuring the
activation state of BCR-ABL at T0, prior to the first administration of the anticancer drug; 2)
administering the anticancer drug to the subject, wherein the first administration of the
anticancer drug is at time T1; 2) measuring the activation state and or expression level of
BCR-ABL at a time T2 in a sample from the subject; and 3) determining a course of treatment
based upon the tion state and or expression level of BCR—ABL.
Example 8. Patient 1: Pathway Profiling to Determine Efficacy of Treatment and/or to
Select the Best Treatment gy Based on In Vitro BCR—ABL Inhibition Profile
This example demonstrates the determination of the efficacy of inhibitor therapies
for patients with L mediated diseases (e.g., chronic myelogenous leukemia), based
upon the expression/activation profiling of analytes of signaling transduction pathway
proteins (e.g., BCR—ABL, BCR, ABL, CRKL, AKT, SRC) in the subject’s blood sample. In
particular instances, patients may be receiVing tor therapy such as treatment with
tyrosine kinase inhibitors (6.g. , imatinib te (Gleevec®), nilotinib (Tasigna®), dasatinib
(Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib (Sutent®), erlotinib (Tarceva®),
lapatinib (GW-572016; Tykerb®), canertinib (CI 1033), semaxinib (SU54l6), vatalanib
7/ZK2225 84), sorafenib (BAY 6; Nexavar®), lefiunomide (SUlOl),
vandetanib (ZACTIMATM; ZD6474), nib (AP24534), and combinations thereof). In
other embodiments, the presence and/or activation state of a L substrate such as
CRKL, AKT, STAT5 and SRC can be measured using a proximity assay such as a
Collaborative Proximity Immunoassay (COPIA) described in PCT Application No.
2010/042182, filed July 15, 2010, and US. Patent Publication Nos. 2008/0261829,
2009/0035792, and 2010/0167945, the disclosures of which are herein incorporated by
reference in their entirety for all purposes. In addition, the expression/activation ng of
kinases and other signaling transduction pathway components in the t’s sample
following in vitro ent with tyrosine kinase inhibitors can provide valuable information
to enable the ian to select an effective therapeutic n.
In an exemplary e, blood samples from a patient (Patient 1) were analyzed to
determine the effectiveness of the patient’s imatinib therapy. Patient 1 is a 55- year old
white, female with a primary diagnosis of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). She has
active CML and has been receiVing imatinib since diagnosis. The patient’s blood was drawn
and leukocytes were isolated using methods described above. In brief, Patient 1’s whole
blood sample was d through a filtration plate to recover leukocytes and circulating
tumor cells. The cells were then lysed and used in a proximity assay (e.g, CEER and
COPIA) that detects the activation state and/or total amount of one or a plurality of oncogenic
fusion proteins (e.g., BCR-ABL) and/or signal transduction molecules (e.g., EGFR, HER-2,
HER-3, HER-4, VEGFR-l, VEGFR-Z, VEGFR-3, PDGFR, c-Met, c-KIT, , SHC,
PI3K). In specific instances, the dilution series of capture dies used in the proximity
assay is diluted 1:5 or 1:20 to achieve the desired concentrations. The number of white blood
cells and the profile of phosphorylated BCR-ABL and other signaling uction y
components were determined using the ity assay. The phosphorylation signal ratio
was also calculated from the analysis and used to determine the patient’s prognosis.
In a preferred embodiment, the patient’s blood sample can be in vitro incubated
with inhibitor treatments prior to isolation of leukocytes or circulating tumor cells. In
ular instances, whole blood samples harvested from patients diagnosed with CML are
treated with 0.1uM, luM or 10uM BCR-ABL inhibitor (e.g., imatinib, nilotinib and
dasatinib) for 1.5 hours at 37°C. The leukocytes or circulating tumor cells are isolated from
the whole blood using a filtration method and lysed using techniques known to those in the
art. The cell lysates are then used in a proximity assay to determine the effect of BCR-ABL
inhibitor treatment on the tion state and/or total amount of one or a plurality of
oncogenic fusion proteins (e.g., BCR—ABL) and/or signal transduction molecules. In certain
embodiments, in vitro treatment with BCR-ABL inhibitors can reduce the levels of
phosphorylated CRKL. In certain instances, CRKL activation in a patient sample can be due
to BCR-ABL activation. In yet r ment, a specific inhibitor such as nib
may be able to attenuate the activated forms ofAKT, STATS and SRC. In other ces,
other inhibitors such as imatinib and nilotinib may not reduce the levels of phosphorylated
AKT and STAT5 in the same patient. In particular instances, phosphorylated AKT and
STAT ing may not be dependent on BCR-ABL activation state. In another aspect, a
patient currently receiving imatinib will likely respond to and should received a combination
therapy such as imatinib and dasatinib due to attenuated expression/activation of BCR-ABL
ates such as CRKL, STATS and SRC.
describes the patients analyzed in this study. Patient 1 has active CML and
has been receiving ent for at least S years. Patient 2 who also has active CML has been
receiving imatinib treatment for 1 year. A-B illustrate that Patient 1 had a lower
amount ofphospho-BCR-ABL per ml of blood as compared to Patient 2 (10,979 CU/ml
versus 185,934 CU/ml), suggesting that Patient 1 was responding to imatinib treatment. A-B show the detection of total and ted (phosphorylated) levels of BCR-ABL as
determined by a sandwich ELISA, following filtration isolation of leukocytes and other
circulating tumor cells. The proximity assay can detect levels of phosphor-BCR—ABL in
K562 cells. A-B show that in vitro treatment with imatinib of blood sample from
Patient 1 dramatically decreased the amount phosphorylated BCR-ABL, as compared to
nib treatment. and 15 show that activated BCR-ABL levels in t 1’s blood
sample were changed when treated with increasing amounts of BCR-ABL inhibitor. In this
experiment, blood samples from Patient 1 were treated for 1.5 hours in vitro with g
amounts of BCR-ABL inhibitors (e.g., 10uM, luM or 0.1uM imatinib, or 10uM, 1 uM or
0.1uM nilotinib). The results show that the mean phospho-BCR—ABL signal was 84 CU for
10uM imatinib, 26 CU for luM imatinib, and 110 CU for 0.1uM imatinib. The mean level
of activated BCR-ABL signal was 47 CU for 10uM nib, 61 CU for luM nilotinib, and
306 CU for 0.1uM nilotinib. A-B show that imatinib was more effective than
nilotinib at reducing activated BCR-ABL protein in Patient 1’s blood sample. The
percentage recovery of activated BCR-ABL signal was % in the sample treated in vitro
with 1 uM imatinib and 19.15% in the sample exposed to luM nilotinib (B). 16A-D illustrates the pathway profile of other phosphorlyated signaling transduction pathway
components such as CRKL (A), AKT (B), STATS (C) and SRC (D). It shows that dasatinib
y, and not imatinib or nilotinib, resulted in reduced levels of ted AKT, STAT4
and SRC in Patient 1’s blood sample. shows that Patient 1’s blood sample contained
very high levels of total BCR (8 million CU/ml).
Example 9. Patient 2: Pathway Profiling to Determine Efficacy of Treatment and/or to
Select the Best Treatment Strategy Based on In Vitro BCR—ABL Inhibition Profile.
This example demonstrates the determination of the efficacy of inhibitor ies
for patients with BCR-ABL mediated diseases (e.g, chronic myelogenous leukemia), based
upon the expression/activation profiling of es of signaling uction pathway
proteins (e.g., L, BCR, ABL, CRKL, AKT, SRC) in the subject’s blood sample. In
particular instances, patients may be receiving inhibitor therapy such as ent with
tyrosine kinase inhibitors (6.g. , imatinib mesylate (Gleevec®), nilotinib (Tasigna®), dasatinib
(Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib (Sutent®), erlotinib va®),
lapatinib (GW-572016; Tykerb®), canertinib (C1 1033), semaxinib (SU5416), vatalanib
(PTK787/ZK2225 84), sorafenib (BAY 6; Nexavar®), leflunomide ),
vandetanib (ZACTIMATM; ZD6474), ponatinib (AP24534), and ations thereof). In
other ments, the presence and/0r activation state of a BCR-ABL ate such as
CRKL, AKT, STATS and SRC can be measured using a proximity assay such as a
Collaborative Proximity Immunoassay (COPIA) described in PCT Application No.
, filed July 15, 2010, and US Patent Publication Nos. 2008/0261829,
2009/0035792, and 2010/0167945, the disclosures of which are herein incorporated by
reference in their entirety for all purposes. In addition, the expression/activation profiling of
kinases and other signaling transduction pathway components in the subject’s sample
following in vitro treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors can provide valuable information
to enable the ian to select an effective therapeutic regimen.
In an exemplary example, the patient (Patient 2) is a 39-year old white, male
diagnosed with CML in January. Patient 2 has been receiving imatinib since diagnosis and
has active e. In a preferred embodiment, the patient’s blood is drawn and leukocytes
are isolated using methods described above. In brief, Patient 2’s whole blood sample was
filtered through a filtration plate to recover leukocytes and circulating tumor cells. The cells
were then lysed and used in a proximity assay (e.g, CEER and COPIA) that detects the
activation state and/or total amount of one or a plurality of oncogenic fusion proteins (e.g.,
L) and/0r signal transduction molecules (e.g., EGFR, HER-2, HER-3, HER-4,
VEGFR—l, VEGFR-2, VEGFR—3, PDGFR, c-Met, c-KIT, IGF-IR, SHC, PI3K). In specific
instances, the dilution series of capture antibodies used in the proximity assay may be d
1:5 or 1:20 to achieve the desired concentrations. The number of white blood cells and the
profile of phosphorylated BCR-ABL and other signaling uction pathway components
can be determined using the proximity assay. The phosphorylation signal ratio can also be
calculated from the analysis and used to determine the patient’s prognosis.
In a preferred embodiment, patient’s blood sample can be in vitro incubated with
tor treatments prior to isolation of leukocytes or circulating tumor cells. In particular
instances, whole blood s harvested from patients sed with CML are treated with
luM BCR-ABL inhibitor (e.g., imatinib, nilotinib and nib) for 1.5 hours at 37°C. The
leukocytes or circulating tumor cells are isolated from the whole blood using a filtration
method and lysed using techniques known to those in the art. The cell lysates are then used
in a proximity assay to determine the effect of BCR-ABL inhibitor treatment on the
tion state and/or total amount of one or a plurality of oncogenic fusion proteins (e.g.,
BCR-ABL) and/or signal transduction molecules. In certain embodiments, in vitro treatment
with nilotinib, and not imatinib will reduce the percentage of phospho-BCR—ABL recovered
in a patient’s blood sample. In a particular ce, a patient with this pathway profile will
likely respond better to nilotinib y, compared to imatinib. In other embodiments, in
vitro treatment with BCR-ABL inhibitors can have no effect on phosphorylated CRKL. In
another ment, a specific inhibitor such as dasatinib may be able to attenuate the
ted forms ofAKT, STATS and SRC. In other instances, other inhibitors such as
imatinib and nilotinib may reduce the levels of phosphorylated AKT in the same patient
sample. In yet another instance, phosphorylated STATS and SRC are reduced by about 20%
due to in vitro treatment with imatinib and nilotinib. In another aspect, a patient currently
receiving imatinib will likely respond better to and should received dasatinib y, due to
attenuated sion/activation of BCR-ABL substrates such as AKT, STATS and SRC.
A-B show that phosphorylated BCR—ABL was detected and measured
following an in vitro treatment of Patient 2’s blood samples with ent dosages of BCR-
ABL inhibitors for 1.5 hours at 37°C. It also shows that nilotinib is more effective compared
to imatinib at decreasing activated BCR-ABL in vitro-treated blood samples from Patient 2.
Increasing the concentration of nilotinib (e.g, 0.1uM, 1 uM. and lOuM) decreased ted
BCR—ABL, while varying imatinib concentration had less effect (B). Imatinib had
very little effect on activated L levels in Patient 2. FIG. l9A-D shows that in vitro
treatment of Patient 2’s blood sample with dasatinib reduced the levels of activated AKT (B),
STATS (C) and SRC (D). On the other hand, similar treatment with either imatinib or
nilotinib treatment reduced only phosphorylated AKT (e.g., 55.54% in lOuM imatinib
treatment sample compared to 100% in non-treated sample).
Example 10. Comparison of Pathway s of Blood s From Patients on
ib for Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
The e demonstrates that y profiles based upon the
expression/activation profiling of analytes of signaling transduction pathway proteins (e.g.,
BCR—ABL, BCR, ABL, CRKL, AKT, SRC) in the subject’s blood sample can be determined
and compared to establish the efficacy of various therapeutic regimens. In a preferred
embodiment, the presence and/or activation state of a BCR-ABL substrate such as CRKL,
AKT, STATS and SRC can be measured using a proximity assay such as a Collaborative
Proximity Immunoassay (COPIA) described in PCT Application No. PCT/USZOlO/042182,
filed July 15, 2010, and US. Patent Publication Nos. 2008/0261829, 2009/0035792, and
2010/0167945, the disclosures of which are herein incorporated by nce in their entirety
for all purposes. In other embodiments, ts may be receiving inhibitor therapy such as
treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (6.g. imatinib mesylate (Gleevec®), nilotinib
(Tasigna®), dasatinib (Sprycel®), bosutinib (SKI-606), gefitinib (Iressa®), sunitinib t®),
erlotinib (Tarceva®), lapatinib (GW-572016; Tykerb®), canertinib (CI 1033), semaxinib
(SU5416), vatalanib (PTK787/ZK2225 84), sorafenib (BAY 43-9006; Nexavar®), leflunomide
(SUlOl), vandetanib (ZACTIMATM; ZD6474), ponatinib (AP24534), and combinations
thereof). In other ments, t blood samples can be treated with ne kinase
inhibitors in vitro for 1.5 hours at 37°C. After which, circulating tumor cells and/or
ytes can be recovered from the blood sample using filtration methods described herein.
The isolated cells can be lysed and used in a proximity assay (e.g., CEER and COPIA) that
detects the activation state and/or total amount of one or a plurality of oncogenic fusion
proteins (e.g., BCR-ABL) and/or signal transduction molecules (e.g., EGFR, HER-2, HER-3,
HER-4, VEGFR-l, VEGFR-2, VEGFR-3, PDGFR, c-Met, c-KIT, IGF-IR, SHC, PI3K,
CRKL, AKT, STATS, SRC). The measured levels of these proteins can be compared
between samples from the same patient or from others. The comparison of pathway profiles
enable a clinician to select the most effective therapy for a patient with a BCR-ABL mediated
disease.
A-D show that phosphorylated CRKL levels were detected and measured in
blood samples that were also treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in vitro. In this
experiment, the e antibodies used in the proximity assays were diluted 1:10 or 1:50 to
achieve the d trations. Patient 1 showed higher levels of activated CRKL
compared to Patient 2. BCR-ABL inhibitors such as imatinib and nilotinib reduced CRKL
levels only in blood samples from Patient 1, and not Patient 2.
WO 54257
A-D illustrate that Patient 1 and Patient 2 do not respond similarly to
imatinib and nilotinib. ted AKT levels increase in samples from Patient 1 following
imatinib treatment, and yet they decrease in samples from Patient 2. In response to nilotinib,
AKT levels remain mostly unchanged in samples from Patient 1, and they greatly decrease in
samples from Patient 2.
A-B show that in vitro dasatinib ent can decrease phospho-STATS
levels in samples from Patient 1 (A) and 2 (B). Activated STATS levels are similar in
samples from either Patient 1 or Patient 2 that received no treatment, lOuM ib and
lOuM nilotinib.
[0206] A-D show that samples from both t 1 and 2 have lower levels of
phospho-SRC in response to imatinib, nilotinib and dasatinib. Dasatinib was more effective
at decreasing phospho-SRC levels compared to imatinib and nilotinib in both Patient 1 and
Patient 2 samples.
Example 11 Detecting and Monitoring Activation of L in CML Patients.
[0207] This example illustrates the methods of the present invention of monitoring
treatment response in a patient sed with CML. This example illustrates that the
s can detect the expression and activation state of multiple proteins from a limited
number of cells. This example shows that the s for using the cell isolation apparatus
of the present invention and the CEER immunoassay provides a more sensitive and
quantitative analysis of fianctional target modulations, as compared to mRNA-based analysis.
Traditional s for monitoring CML treatment response include cytogenetic
testing, bone marrow aspiration smear evaluation, cence in situ hybridization (FISH)
of Ph chromosome, and real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (Q-PCR).
Typically, cytogenetic g or bone aspiration smear tion is performed at 3, 6, and
12 months of treatment or until CCyR attained. Currently, Q-PCR is the most sensitive test
for ent response. The present invention provides methods for monitoring in viva
tions of BCR-ABL kinase inhibition that are more sensitive than Q-PCR and do not
require the removal or dilution of drug in the patient’s blood sample.
In this study, the levels of total and activated BCR-ABL were ed from CML
patients using the methods of the present invention. represents a table of patients
evaluated in this study. The date of the diagnosis and the patient’s course of treatment were
recorded. Blood was drawn at various time points during the course of the study.
Leukocytes and circulating tumor cells were isolated from the patient blood samples and
2012/025491
lysed according to methods bed herein. Cell lysate was processed and analyzed by
methods described in Example 6. tions of the expression and activation of L
and other ing molecules (e.g., AKT, SRC, CRKL and STAT5) in the patient blood
sample were ined using a proximity assay (e.g., COPIA or CEER). Detailed
descriptions of a proximity assay such as a orative Proximity Immunoassay (COPIA)
described in PCT Application No. l 82, filed July 15, 2010, and US Patent
Publication Nos. 2008/026 l 829, 2009/0035792, and 2010/0167945, the disclosures of which
are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
Monitoring CML progression in patients following drug treatment.
[0210] ents the total and ted L levels detected in patient
samples using the methods of the present invention. Further details of the patient samples are
described in this example.
Total BCR, ABL and L levels were determined from a blood sample from
a normal, healthy subject. As expected, BCR—ABL levels were negative (see, ).
[0212] Patient 1 was diagnosed with CML in December 2006 and received imatinib
(Gleevec) treatment. To determine Patient l’s response to imatinib, total and activated BCR-
ABL levels were analyzed at three time points (l/3l, 4/25, and 10/24). Patient 1 had a
phosphorylated BCR-ABL/white blood cell ratio of 0. 130 at time point 1, a ratio of 0.133 at
the time point 2 and a ratio of 0.078 at the third time point 3 (A). The change in
phosphorylated BCR—ABL levels across the time points was not detect by mRNA expression
assay as mRNA values were 0.04i0.01% and 0.04% at time point 2 and 3, respectively.
RNA expression assay detects active tumor cells at three log reduction from a standard
baseline value. The advantage of the CEER immuno-microarray is that it detects phospho-
BCR—ABL at more than three logs reduction.
[0213] The results from Patient 7 show that mRNA levels of BCR-ABL levels were
undetectable, yet total and activated BCR-ABL levels were detected using the CEER
Immuno-microassay. The method of the present invention proved to bele more sensitive
for detecting activated L than total BCR-ABL. In particular, CEER Immunoassay
detects the expression and activation state of BCR-ABL in patients with an active tumor cell
to total white blood cell ration of 0.05%, which corresponds to a greater than four log
reduction from a standard baseline value. Patient 7 was diagnosed with CML in May and
initiated imatinib treatment in April. Response to treatment was monitored at two time points
post-treatment (e.g, June and Feb). The results show that phospho-BCR—ABL decreased
with time (see, bar graph and line graph of B).
Patient 2 was diagnosed in Jan and received ib treatment in Feb. Leukocytes
and CTCs from the t were isolated and lysed using the 96-well embodiment of the cell
isolation apparatus from blood drawn on 2/2 and 3/2. The tube embodiment of the cell
isolation apparatus of the present invention was used from blood drawn on 10/12 and 12/21.
Using methods of the present invention, it was determined that Patient 2 expressed a lower
level of activated BCR-ABL at the time point in May (see, e.g., bar graph and line graph of
A, B). Yet, the level increased by Oct. The results from the CEER Immunoassay
correlates with the mRNA expression data. The accuracy of Q-PCR using standard methods
(e.g., MolecularMD kit for BCR-ABL) and low levels ofmRNA are ghted in C.
The % ofBCR-ABL to ABL varied with amount ofmRNA present in the sample.
Monitoring in vitro drug response in patient samples.
To determine Patient 2’s response to drug treatment in vitro, a blood sample was
treated with various amounts of either imatinib or nilotinib and the total and activated state of
BCR—ABL was assayed. The CEER immunoassay was able to detect the se to drug
ent in Patient 7’s sample, thus trating that this assay is a useful tool for
determining the best therapy for a patient.
Patient 3 was sed with CML and ed dasatinib (Sprycel) treatment.
Total and activated BCR-ABL levels were monitored at 5 time points (2/07 4/04/ 8/22/
, 7/25,
and 10/ 17). The blood drawn on 2/07 and 4/04 were processed using the 96-well
embodiment of the cell isolation apparatus and blood drawn in 7/25 and 8/22 were processed
using the tube embodiment of the apparatus of the present ion. A shows that
the pBClVWBC ratio was lowest on 10/17. B illustrates that phospho-BCR-ABL
level peaked in the sample from 7/25 and decreased to its lowest level in the 10/17 sample.
Patient 3 responded to dasatinib and had lower levels of ted BCR-ABL at the last time
point, as ghted in A. The results of the CEER assay for phospho-BCR-ABL
correlate with the mRNA expression data.
Patient 8 was diagnosed with CML on July 2007 and was changed to dasatinib
treatment from imatinib on 05/25. Blood was drawn on 5/18 and 6/20 and processed using
the 96-well embodiment of the cell isolation apparatus of the present invention. The tube
embodiment of the present invention was used to isolate and lyse leukocytes and CTCs from
blood drawn on 7/ 18, 08/18 and 10/ 13. A shows that the phospho BCR-ABL/WBC
ratio decrease from 5/18 to 8/18, yet increased on 03/13. The phospho BCR-ABL/total BCR-
ABL ratio increased while the patient was receiving dasatinib (B), possibly due to
progression of CML.
Patient 18 responded to an initial treatment of nib on 08/20, and then to a
treatment of ponatinib on 08/22. All blood drawn from the patient in this study was
processed using the tube embodiment of the cell isolation apparatus of the present ion.
The results from methods of the present invention show that the pBCR-ABL/WBC ratio
decreased during the course of therapy. The mRNA ratio as determined by standard methods
known to those skilled in the art also shows a decrease in BCR-ABL during the measured
time period.
Patient 14 was diagnosed with CML in June and received hydroxyurea treatment on
6/28 and dasatinib in 08/29. Blood drawn on 8/29 and 10/03 was processed using the tube
embodiment of the cell isolation apparatus of the present invention. B shows that the
activated o-BCR—ABL level (pBCR-ABL/WBC ratio) decreased after the first time
point (6/28) and was at its lowest at the last time point (Oct 20). A blood sample from patient
14 was in vitro d with different concentrations of either imatinib or nib.
A-B show that t 14’s in vitro response to drug treatment lead to a reduction in
phosphorylated BCR-ABL upon imatinib or nilotinib treatment.
sion
[0220] This example illustrates the analysis of BCR-ABL sion and phosphorylation
in cell lysates ed from 20 CML patients. This example illustrates the use of methods of
the t invention, including the cell isolation method and the CEER immunoassay. In
particular, while blood cells and circulating tumor cells were isolated from a sample of
patient’s whole blood without removing or diluting the drug level in the blood. Different
levels of BCR-ABL kinase tion was observed in patients receiving targeted treatment.
This example also shows that the detection of BCR-ABL by the CEER immunoassay has a
high level of onal sensitivity and is of clinical use for monitoring CML progression.
The methods of the present invention can be used for screening and monitoring the efficacy
of the drug which is a great benefit to CML patients receiving targeted therapy. Likewise, the
methods can assist a clinician to determine the most effective treatment options for a t.
All publications and patent applications cited in this specification including PCT
Application No. PCT/US20 1 0/0533 86, filed October 20, 2010, are herein incorporated by
reference as if each individual ation or patent application were specifically and
individually indicated to be incorporated by reference. Although the foregoing invention has
been described in some detail by way of illustration and example for purposes of clarity of
tanding, it will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art in light of the
teachings of this invention that certain changes and ations may be made thereto
without departing from the spirit or scope of the appended claims.
Claims (20)
1. An apparatus for isolating and separating leukocytes from red blood cells in a whole blood sample, said apparatus comprising: a filtration device comprising an upper chamber, which is a cylindrical tube, a lower chamber, which is a cylindrical tube, and one or more stacked filter membranes between said upper and lower chambers, wherein said one or more stacked filter membranes are e of retaining said leukocytes, wherein the inner diameters of the upper and lower chambers are similar as to create a cylindrical tube which allows liquids to pass therethrough, wherein said one or more d filter nes is placed between screw threads of the upper r and lower chamber, which chambers are securely attached er; and a collection tube for collecting red blood cells from said whole blood sample, wherein said filtration device is placed on top of said collection tube, and wherein said red blood cells are separated from said leukocytes and collected in said collection tube following centrifugation.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said tion device comprises two, three, or four stacked filter membranes.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 or claim 2, wherein said upper chamber further comprises a snap-cap lid attached thereto.
4. The apparatus of any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein said leukocytes are selected from the group consisting of normal leukocytes, malignant leukocytes, diseased leukocytes, and combinations thereof.
5. The apparatus of any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein said apparatus is a plurality of filtration devices.
6. A method for preparing a lysate of leukocytes from a whole blood sample without ntial dilution of a therapeutic agent, said method sing the following steps: (a) g said whole blood sample into an apparatus of any one of claims 1 to 5; (b) centrifuging said apparatus to e said leukocytes on said one or more stacked filter membranes and to separate said red blood cells into said collection tube; and (c) lysing said leukocytes captured on said one or more stacked filter membranes with lysis buffer but without a wash step between steps (b) and (c) to thereby prepare a lysate of leukocytes.
7. The method of claim 6, further comprising replacing said collection tube with a second collection tube between steps (b) and (c).
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising centrifuging said apparatus containing said second tion tube after lysing said leukocytes in step (c) and ting said lysate of leukocytes in said second collection tube.
9. The method of any one of claims 6 to 8, wherein said whole blood sample is incubated in vitro with a therapeutic agent prior to loading into said apparatus.
10. The method of any one of claims 6 to 9, n expression and/or activation level of at least one oncogenic fusion protein and/or signal transduction molecule is measured in said lysate of leukocytes.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the at least one oncogenic fusion protein comprises BCR-ABL.
12. The method of any one of claims 6 to 8, wherein said apparatus is a ity of filtration devices.
13. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said upper chamber is a rical tube with male helical ridges or threads.
14. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the snap-cap lid is tethered via a strap to the upper chamber.
15. The tus of claim 13, wherein the threads of the upper portion fit securely into female grooves of the lower chamber.
16. The apparatus of claim 1, comprising a filtration device wherein the upper chamber and the lower chamber are screwed together.
17. A lysate of leukocytes when prepared according to the method of any one of claims 6 to 12.
18. An apparatus according to claim 1, substantially as herein described with nce to any one or more of the examples but excluding comparative examples.
19. A method ing to claim 6, substantially as herein described with reference to any one or more of the examples but excluding comparative examples.
20. A lysate of leukocytes according to claim 17, substantially as herein described with nce to any one or more of the examples but excluding comparative examples. WO 54257
Applications Claiming Priority (5)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US201161444044P | 2011-02-17 | 2011-02-17 | |
US61/444,044 | 2011-02-17 | ||
US201161489998P | 2011-05-25 | 2011-05-25 | |
US61/489,998 | 2011-05-25 | ||
PCT/US2012/025491 WO2012154257A1 (en) | 2011-02-17 | 2012-02-16 | Apparatus and method for isolating leukocytes and tumor cells by filtration |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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NZ613971A NZ613971A (en) | 2015-06-26 |
NZ613971B2 true NZ613971B2 (en) | 2015-09-29 |
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