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Taylor and Francis Group, Leukemia & Lymphoma, 7(53), p. 1390-1398, 2012

DOI: 10.3109/10428194.2011.654337

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CD40 ligand is necessary and sufficient to support primary diffuse large B-cell lymphoma cells in culture: a tool forin vitropreclinical studies with primary B-cell malignancies

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Established cell lines are utilized extensively to study tumor biology and preclinical therapeutic development; however, they may not accurately recapitulate the heterogeneity of their corresponding primary disease. B-cell tumor cells are especially difficult to maintain under conventional culture conditions, limiting access to samples that faithfully represent this disease for preclinical studies. Here, we used primary canine diffuse large B-cell lymphoma to establish a culture system that reliably supports the growth of these cells. CD40 ligand, either expressed by feeder cells or provided as a soluble two-trimeric form, was sufficient to support primary lymphoma cells in vitro. The tumor cells retained their original phenotype, clonality and known karyotypic abnormalities after extended expansion in culture. Finally, we illustrate the utility of the feeder cell-free culture system for comparable assessment of cytotoxicity using dog and human B-cell malignancies. We conclude this system has broad applications for in vitro preclinical development for B-cell malignancies.