Patient-derived xenografts and organoids model therapy response in prostate cancer

Sofia Karkampouna(University of Bern), Federico La Manna(University of Bern), Andrej Benjak(University of Bern), Mirjam Kiener(University of Bern), Marta De Menna(University of Bern), Eugenio Zoni(University of Bern), Joël Grosjean(University of Bern), Irena Klima(University of Bern), Andrea Garofoli(University of Basel), Marco Bolis(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Arianna Vallerga(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Jean‐Philippe Theurillat(Institute of Oncology Research), Maria Rosaria De Filippo(University of Bern), Vera Genitsch(University of Bern), David Keller(ETH Zurich), Tijmen H. Booij(ETH Zurich), Christian U. Stirnimann(ETH Zurich), Kenneth Eng(Cornell University), Andrea Sboner(Cornell University), Charlotte K.Y. Ng(University of Bern), Salvatore Piscuoglio(University of Basel), Peter C. Gray(Salk Institute for Biological Studies), Martin Spahn(Lindenhofspital), Mark A. Rubin(University of Bern), George N. Thalmann(University of Bern), Marianna Kruithof‐de Julio(University of Bern)
Nature Communications
February 18, 2021
Cited by 153Open Access
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Abstract

Therapy resistance and metastatic processes in prostate cancer (PCa) remain undefined, due to lack of experimental models that mimic different disease stages. We describe an androgen-dependent PCa patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model from treatment-naïve, soft tissue metastasis (PNPCa). RNA and whole-exome sequencing of the PDX tissue and organoids confirmed transcriptomic and genomic similarity to primary tumor. PNPCa harbors BRCA2 and CHD1 somatic mutations, shows an SPOP/FOXA1-like transcriptomic signature and microsatellite instability, which occurs in 3% of advanced PCa and has never been modeled in vivo. Comparison of the treatment-naïve PNPCa with additional metastatic PDXs (BM18, LAPC9), in a medium-throughput organoid screen of FDA-approved compounds, revealed differential drug sensitivities. Multikinase inhibitors (ponatinib, sunitinib, sorafenib) were broadly effective on all PDX- and patient-derived organoids from advanced cases with acquired resistance to standard-of-care compounds. This proof-of-principle study may provide a preclinical tool to screen drug responses to standard-of-care and newly identified, repurposed compounds.


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