4.8 Article

Supervised learning on impedance cytometry data for label-free biophysical distinction of pancreatic cancer cells versus their associated fibroblasts under gemcitabine treatment

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 231, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115262

Keywords

Pancreatic cancer; Chemotherapy; Tumor microenvironment; Impedance cytometry; Machine learning

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Chemotherapy failure in pancreatic cancer patients is often caused by cancer cell reprogramming towards drug resistance by cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs), which are abundant in the tumor microenvironment. Distinguishing drug resistant cancer cells from CAFs is challenging due to non-specific staining. Biophysical metrics from single-cell impedance cytometry are utilized to distinguish viable cancer cells from CAFs before and after gemcitabine treatment. Machine learning is used to train a classifier model, which can recognize and predict the proportions of each cell type in multicellular tumor samples, validated by confusion matrix and flow cytometry assays. The distinguishing biophysical metrics of viable drug resistant cancer cells in cocultures with CAFs can be used to identify markers in longitudinal studies.
Chemotherapy failure in pancreatic cancer patients is widely attributed to cancer cell reprogramming towards drug resistance by cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs), which are the abundant cell type in the tumor microenvironment. Association of drug resistance to specific cancer cell phenotypes within multicellular tumors can advance isolation protocols for enabling cell-type specific gene expression markers to identify drug resistance. This requires the distinction of drug resistant cancer cells versus CAFs, which is challenging since permeabilization of CAF cells during drug treatment can cause non-specific uptake of cancer cell-specific stains. Cellular biophysical metrics, on the other hand, can provide multiparametric information to assess the gradual alteration of target cancer cells towards drug resistance, but these phenotypes need to be distinguished versus CAFs. Using pancreatic cancer cells and CAFs from a metastatic patient-derived tumor that exhibits cancer cell drug resistance under CAF co-culture, the biophysical metrics from multifrequency single-cell impedance cytometry are utilized for distinction of the subpopulation of viable cancer cells versus CAFs, before and after gemcitabine treatment. This is accomplished through supervised machine learning after training the model using key impedance metrics for cancer cells and CAFs from transwell co-cultures, so that an optimized classifier model can recognize each cell type and predict their respective proportions in multicellular tumor samples, before and after gemcitabine treatment, as validated by their confusion matrix and flow cytometry assays. In this manner, an aggregate of the distinguishing biophysical metrics of viable cancer cells after gemcitabine treatment in cocultures with CAFs can be used in longitudinal studies, to classify and isolate the drug resistant subpopulation for identifying markers.

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