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Vitamin D effects on human colon normal and tumour organoids

Authors :
Fernández-Barral, Asunción
Costales-Carrera, Alba
Buira, Sandra P.
Jung, Peter
Ferrer-Mayorga, Gemma
Larriba, María Jesús
Bustamante-Madrid, Pilar
Domínguez, Orlando
Real, Francisco X.
Guerra-Pastrián, Laura
Lafarga, Miguel
García-Olmo, Damián
Cantero, Ramón
Peso, Luis del
Batlle, Eduard
Rojo, Federico
Muñoz Terol, Alberto
Barbáchano, Antonio
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Federation of European Biochemical Societies, 2022.

Abstract

Trabajo presentado en FEBS Open Bio, celebrado en Lisboa (Portugal) del 09 al 14 de julio de 2022.<br />Many studies indicate an association between vitamin D deficiency and increased colorectal cancer risk and, specially, mortality. Accordingly, the active vitamin D metabolite 1a,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (calcitriol) inhibits the proliferation and promotes the differentiation of colon carcinoma cells and of other tumour cell types, and also has antitumour effects in animal models of colon cancer. These results prompted us to analyse the effects of calcitriol on human colon normal and cancer stem cells. To this end, we established a living biobank of patient-derived colon organoids generated from the tumour mass and from the adjacent healthy tissue obtained from surgical biopsies. Organoids are a three-dimensional culture system of normal or cancer stem cells and their progeny with a self-organized multicellular structure. By immunohistochemistry and RNAscope in situ hybridization, we found that vitamin D receptor is expressed in LGR5+ colon stem cells in human tissue and in normal and tumour organoid cultures. RNA-sequencing assays showed that both organoid types respond differentially to calcitriol with profound and contrasting changes in their transcriptomic profiles. This was confirmed in an independent series of patient-derived organoids by RT-qPCR assays. In normal organoids, calcitriol upregulates stemness-related genes and inhibits cell proliferation. In contrast, in tumour organoids calcitriol has little effect on stemnessrelated genes, while it induces differentiation-associated genes, and variably reduces cell proliferation. Concordantly, electron microscopy analyses showed that calcitriol does not affect the blastic cell phenotype in normal organoids, but it induces a series of differentiated features in tumour organoids. These results indicate that calcitriol maintains the undifferentiated phenotype of human normal colon stem cells (homeostatic action), while it promotes the differentiation of colon cancer stem cells (anticancer action). *

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..61a184bb695ea0a84a49726810fb6334