Functional Therapeutic Target Validation Using Pediatric Zebrafish Xenograft Models

Charlotte Gatzweiler(German Cancer Research Center), Johannes Ridinger(German Cancer Research Center), Sonja Herter(German Cancer Research Center), Xenia F. Gerloff(German Cancer Research Center), Dina ElHarouni(German Cancer Research Center), Yannick Berker(German Cancer Research Center), Roland Imle(German Cancer Research Center), Lukas Schmitt(German Cancer Research Center), Sina Kreth(German Cancer Research Center), Sabine Stainczyk(German Cancer Research Center), Simay Ayhan(German Cancer Research Center), Sara Najafi(German Cancer Research Center), Damir Krunic(German Cancer Research Center), Karen Frese(Heidelberg University), Benjamin Meder(Heidelberg University), David Reuß(German Cancer Research Center), Petra Fiesel(German Cancer Research Center), Kathrin Schramm(German Cancer Research Center), Mirjam Blattner-Johnson(German Cancer Research Center), David Jones(German Cancer Research Center), Ana Banito(German Cancer Research Center), Frank Westermann(German Cancer Research Center), Sina Oppermann(German Cancer Research Center), Till Milde(German Cancer Research Center), Heike Peterziel(German Cancer Research Center), Olaf Witt(German Cancer Research Center), Ina Oehme(German Cancer Research Center)
Cancers
February 8, 2022
Cited by 30Open Access
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Abstract

The survival rate among children with relapsed tumors remains poor, due to tumor heterogeneity, lack of directly actionable tumor drivers and multidrug resistance. Novel personalized medicine approaches tailored to each tumor are urgently needed to improve cancer treatment. Current pediatric precision oncology platforms, such as the INFORM (INdividualized Therapy FOr Relapsed Malignancies in Childhood) study, reveal that molecular profiling of tumor tissue identifies targets associated with clinical benefit in a subgroup of patients only and should be complemented with functional drug testing. In such an approach, patient-derived tumor cells are exposed to a library of approved oncological drugs in a physiological setting, e.g., in the form of animal avatars injected with patient tumor cells. We used molecularly fully characterized tumor samples from the INFORM study to compare drug screen results of individual patient-derived cell models in functional assays: (i) patient-derived spheroid cultures within a few days after tumor dissociation; (ii) tumor cells reisolated from the corresponding mouse PDX; (iii) corresponding long-term organoid-like cultures and (iv) drug evaluation with the corresponding zebrafish PDX (zPDX) model. Each model had its advantage and complemented the others for drug hit and drug combination selection. Our results provide evidence that in vivo zPDX drug screening is a promising add-on to current functional drug screening in precision medicine platforms.


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