Propagated circulating tumor cells uncovers the role of NFκB and COP1 in metastasis

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Abstract

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs), a population of cancer cells that represents the seeds of metastatic nodules, are a promising model system for studying metastasis. However, expansion of patient-derived CTCs ex vivo is challenging and dependent on the collection of high numbers of CTCs, which are ultra-rare. Here, we report the development of a combined CTC and CTC-derived xenograft (CDX) platform for expanding and studying patient-derived CTCs from metastatic colon, lung, and pancreatic cancers. Propagated CTCs yielded a highly aggressive population of cells that could be used to routinely and robustly establish primary tumors and metastatic lesions in CDXs. Differential gene analysis of the resultant CTC models emphasized a role for NF-kB signaling as a pan-cancer signaling pathway involved in metastasis. Furthermore, metastatic CTCs were identified through a prospective 5-gene signature ( BCAR1, COL1A1, IGSF3, RRAD, and TFPI2 ). Whole-exome sequencing of CDX models and metastases further identified mutations in constitutive photomorphogenesis protein 1 ( COP1 ) as a potential driver of metastasis. These findings illustrate the utility of the combined patient-derived CTC model and provide a glimpse of the promise of CTCs in identifying drivers of cancer metastasis.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00