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Characterization of a castrate-resistant prostate cancer xenograft derived from a patient of West African ancestry

Authors :
Patierno, Brendon M.
Foo, Wen-Chi
Allen, Tyler
Somarelli, Jason A.
Ware, Kathryn E.
Gupta, Santosh
Wise, Sandra
Wise, John P.
Qin, Xiaodi
Zhang, Dadong
Xu, Lingfan
Li, Yanjing
Chen, Xufeng
Inman, Brant A.
McCall, Shannon J.
Huang, Jiaoti
Kittles, Rick A.
Owzar, Kouros
Gregory, Simon
Armstrong, Andrew J.
George, Daniel J.
Patierno, Steven R.
Hsu, David S.
Freedman, Jennifer A.
Source :
Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases; September 2022, Vol. 25 Issue: 3 p513-523, 11p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Prostate cancer is a clinically and molecularly heterogeneous disease, with highest incidence and mortality among men of African ancestry. To date, prostate cancer patient-derived xenograft (PCPDX) models to study this disease have been difficult to establish because of limited specimen availability and poor uptake rates in immunodeficient mice. Ancestrally diverse PCPDXs are even more rare, and only six PCPDXs from self-identified African American patients from one institution were recently made available. Methods: In the present study, we established a PCPDX from prostate cancer tissue from a patient of estimated 90% West African ancestry with metastatic castration resistant disease, and characterized this model’s pathology, karyotype, hotspot mutations, copy number, gene fusions, gene expression, growth rate in normal and castrated mice, therapeutic response, and experimental metastasis. Results: This PCPDX has a mutation in TP53and loss of PTENand RB1. We have documented a 100% take rate in mice after thawing the PCPDX tumor from frozen stock. The PCPDX is castrate- and docetaxel-resistant and cisplatin-sensitive, and has gene expression patterns associated with such drug responses. After tail vein injection, the PCPDX tumor cells can colonize the lungs of mice. Conclusion: This PCPDX, along with others that are established and characterized, will be useful pre-clinically for studying the heterogeneity of prostate cancer biology and testing new therapeutics in models expected to be reflective of the clinical setting.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13657852 and 14765608
Volume :
25
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs58046016
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41391-021-00460-y