4.3 Article

Analysis of acquired mutations in transgenes arising in Ba/F3 transformation assays: findings and recommendations

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages 12596-12606

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.15392

Keywords

reproducibility in research; Ba/F3 transformation assay; functional validation; leukemia; oncogenes

Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator award
  2. NIH/NCI MERIT award [R37CA065823]
  3. NIH/NCI R00 award [5R00CA151670-04]
  4. V foundation scholar award
  5. T32 program training grant [5T32GM071338-08]
  6. Knight Cancer Institute stipend award
  7. Allan Price memorial ARCS scholar award
  8. Tartar Trust fellowship

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The identification and functional validation of potentially oncogenic mutations in leukemia is an essential step toward a future of personalized targeted therapy. To assess the oncogenic capacity of individual mutations, reliable and scalable in vitro experimental approaches are required. Since 1988, researchers have used the IL-3 dependent Ba/F3 transformation assay to validate the oncogenic potential of mutations to drive factor-independent growth. Here we report a previously unrecognized phenomenon whereby Ba/F3 cells, engineered to express weakly transforming mutations, present with additional acquired mutations in the expressed transgene following factor withdrawal. Using four mutations with known transformative capacity in three cytokine receptors (CSF2RB, CSF3R and IL7R), we demonstrate that the mutated receptors are highly susceptible to acquiring additional mutations. These acquired mutations of unknown functional significance are selected by factor withdrawal but appear to exist prior to the removal of growth factor. This anomaly has the potential to confound efforts to both validate and characterize oncogenic mutations in leukemia, particularly when it is not standard practice to sequence validate cDNAs from transformed Ba/F3 lines. We present specific recommendations to detect and mitigate this phenomenon in future research using Ba/F3 transformation assays, along with methods to make the Ba/F3 assay more quantitative.

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