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Mimicking tumor cell heterogeneity of colorectal cancer in a patient-derived organoid-fibroblast model

Authors :
Velina S Atanasova
Crhistian de Jesus Cardona
Vaclav Hejret
Andreas Tiefenbacher
Loan Tran
Carina Binder
Theresia Mair
Julijan Kabiljo
Janik Clement
Katharina Woeran
Barbara Neudert
Markus Hengstschläger
Markus Mitterhauser
Leonhard Müllauer
Boris Tichy
Michael Bergmann
Gabriele Schweikert
Markus Hartl
Helmut Dolznig
Gerda Egger
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Patient-derived organoid (PDO) cancer models are generated from epithelial tumor cells. Although they reflect the molecular tumor characteristics, they lack the complexity of the tumor microenvironment, which is a key driver of tumorigenesis and therapy response. Here, we present a colorectal cancer (CRC) organoid model that incorporates epithelial cells and stromal fibroblasts from the same patient. Molecular characterization of primary cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and matched normal fibroblasts (NF) revealed proteomic, secretome and gene expression differences in pathways associated with tumor related fibroblast function. Further, CAFs retained higher motility compared to NFs in vitro. Importantly, both CAFs and NFs supported cancer cell proliferation in 3D co-cultures, without the addition of classical niche factors. PDOs grown together with fibroblasts displayed a larger cellular heterogeneity of tumor cells compared to mono-cultures, and closely resembled the in vivo tumor morphology. This was also confirmed by the calculation of cellular proportions of epithelial cell subtypes in organoid mono-versus co-cultures, which were inferred through bioinformatics deconvolution of bulk RNA sequencing data using published single cell RNA sequencing datasets from CRC tissues. Additionally, we observed a mutual crosstalk between tumor cells and fibroblasts in the co-cultures. This was manifested by majorly deregulated pathways such as cell-cell communication and extracellular matrix remodeling in the organoids. For the fibroblasts, we observed enhanced expression of tumor induced marker genes and cytokines characteristic for myo- and immunogenic fibroblasts. This model will be vital as a physiological personalized tumor model to study disease mechanisms and therapy response in CRC.One Sentence SummaryPatient matched fibroblasts support tumor organoid growth in 3D co-culture and maintain intratumoral cellular heterogeneity and histo-morphology.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7056150f57cf205623b4097a7bc3d202