Abstract 524P
Background
Currently, glioblastoma (GBM) diagnosis and monitoring rely on neuroimaging and histopathological confirmation. However, overall survival has not improved in last decades due to therapeutic failure and to a lack of biomarkers for relapses’ detection. Liquid biopsies (i.e. blood or CSF) using nucleosomes-containing-histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) have the potential to become valuable biomarkers for diagnosis and monitoring GBM.
Methods
Four glioblastoma cell lines (SF-126, U-87MG, U-118MG, and U-138MG) compared to a healthy microglia cell line (HMC3) and other solid cancer cell lines including pancreas (MIA PaCa-2), liver (HepG2), and cervix/uterus (HeLa) have been analyzed to identify their epigenetic profile. Nucleosomes were extracted and analyzed with the Nu.Q® Discover immunoassays platform addressing 13 histone-PTMs. Quantitative results of PTMs expression were normalized on quantification of total nucleosomes (H3.1-nucleosomes). Moreover, to demonstrate the capacity of the Nu.Q® assays to quantitatively monitor PTMs, GBM cell line SF-126 (n=3) was treated with an EZH2 inhibitor (responsible of H3K27 methylation) (iEZH2) for 4-, 24-, and 48 hours.
Results
The immunoassay identified three candidate biomarkers compared to control cell lines (n=4): citrullinated-histone H3 (H3R8Cit) (control=4.68% ; GBM=13.88% ; p<0.05), phosphorylation of H3S10 (H3S10Ph) (control=2.31% ; GBM=5.57% ; p< 0.05), and a trend in H3K4Me2 elevation (control=0.43% ; GBM=1.07% ; p=0.066) in GBM cell lines(n=4). These results were confirmed by western blot. In addition, PCA revealed a segregation between GBM and control cells, mainly driven by these three PTMs. Moreover, the monitoring assay revealed that, after 24 hours and 48 hours of exposure, the level of H3K27Me3 – expressed as ratio of total nucleosomes was decreased by 32% (control=14.67%±0.58% ; iEZH2=10.00%±1.73% ; p<0.05) and 41% (control=15.33%±1.53% ; iEZH2=9.00%±0.00% ; p<0.05), respectively. Those results were also confirmed by western blot analysis.
Conclusions
In conclusion, we identified three specific in vitro epigenetic-based marks of GBM and demonstrated that the Nu. Q® technology is a valuable tool to monitor the degree of PTMs expression.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
University of Namur.
Funding
University of Namur; Belgian Volition.
Disclosure
J. Decarpentrie: Financial Interests, Institutional, Research Grant: Belgian Volition. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
592P - The role of early change in circulating tumor DNA as a potential predictor of response to chemotherapy in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer
Presenter: Jinjia Chang
Session: Poster session 10
594P - The efficacy of anti-EGFR therapy for RAS mutant metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients with RAS mutation negative in circulating-tumor DNA (ctDNA) after 1st- or 2nd-line chemotherapy
Presenter: Naoki Izawa
Session: Poster session 10
595P - The DUREC trial: Durvalumab plus total neoadjuvant therapy in locally advanced rectal cancer - a multicenter, single-arm, phase II study (GEMCAD-1703)
Presenter: Jaume Capdevila Castillon
Session: Poster session 10
597P - Surgical quality for patients (pts) treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy vs chemoradiation for locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC): PROSPECT (NCCTG N1048, alliance)
Presenter: Martin Weiser
Session: Poster session 10
598P - Influence of the early stoma closure after low rectal cancer resection on completeness of adjuvant chemotherapy (CoCStom): A randomized, controlled multicentre trial of the AIO (AIO KRK 0113)
Presenter: Flavius Sandra-Petrescu
Session: Poster session 10
599P - R-IMMUNE: A phase Ib/II study to evaluate safety and efficacy of atezolizumab combined with radio-chemotherapy in a preoperative setting for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC)
Presenter: Javier Carrasco
Session: Poster session 10