International Journal of Hyperthermia (Dec 2023)

Investigating cell death responses associated with histotripsy ablation of canine osteosarcoma

  • Alayna N. Hay,
  • Elliana R. Vickers,
  • Manali Patwardhan,
  • Jessica Gannon,
  • Lauren Ruger,
  • Irving C. Allen,
  • Eli Vlaisavljevich,
  • Joanne Tuohy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2023.2279027
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40, no. 1

Abstract

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AbstractBackground Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most frequently occurring primary bone tumor in dogs and people and innovative treatment options are profoundly needed. Histotripsy is an emerging tumor ablation modality, and it is essential for the clinical translation of histotripsy to gain knowledge about the outcome of nonablated tumor cells that could remain postablation. The objective of this study was to characterize the cell death genetic signature and proliferation response of canine OS cells post a near complete histotripsy ablation (96% ± 1.5) and to evaluate genetic cell death signatures associated with histotripsy ablation and OS in vivo.Methods In the current study, we ablated three canine OS cell lines with a histotripsy dose that resulted in near complete ablation to allow for a viable tumor cell population for downstream analyses. To assess the in vivo cell death genetic signature, we characterized cell death genetic signature in histotripsy-ablated canine OS tumors collected 24-h postablation.Results Differential gene expression changes observed in the 4% viable D17 and D418 cells, and histotripsy-ablated OS tumor samples, but not in Abrams cells, were associated with immunogenic cell death (ICD). The 4% viable OS cells demonstrated significantly reduced proliferation, compared to control OS cells, in vitro.Conclusion Histotripsy ablation of OS cell lines leads to direct and potentially indirect cell death as evident by, reduced proliferation in remaining viable OS cells and cell death genetic signatures suggestive of ICD both in vitro and in vivo.

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