Chemogenomic profiling of breast cancer patient-derived xenografts reveals targetable vulnerabilities for difficult-to-treat tumors

P Savage, A Pacis, H Kuasne, L Liu, D Lai… - Communications …, 2020 - nature.com
P Savage, A Pacis, H Kuasne, L Liu, D Lai, A Wan, M Dankner, C Martinez, V Muñoz-Ramos…
Communications biology, 2020nature.com
Subsets of breast tumors present major clinical challenges, including triple-negative,
metastatic/recurrent disease and rare histologies. Here, we developed 37 patient-derived
xenografts (PDX) from these difficult-to-treat cancers to interrogate their molecular
composition and functional biology. Whole-genome and transcriptome sequencing and
reverse-phase protein arrays revealed that PDXs conserve the molecular landscape of their
corresponding patient tumors. Metastatic potential varied between PDXs, where low …
Abstract
Subsets of breast tumors present major clinical challenges, including triple-negative, metastatic/recurrent disease and rare histologies. Here, we developed 37 patient-derived xenografts (PDX) from these difficult-to-treat cancers to interrogate their molecular composition and functional biology. Whole-genome and transcriptome sequencing and reverse-phase protein arrays revealed that PDXs conserve the molecular landscape of their corresponding patient tumors. Metastatic potential varied between PDXs, where low-penetrance lung micrometastases were most common, though a subset of models displayed high rates of dissemination in organotropic or diffuse patterns consistent with what was observed clinically. Chemosensitivity profiling was performed in vivo with standard-of-care agents, where multi-drug chemoresistance was retained upon xenotransplantation. Consolidating chemogenomic data identified actionable features in the majority of PDXs, and marked regressions were observed in a subset that was evaluated in vivo. Together, this clinically-annotated PDX library with comprehensive molecular and phenotypic profiling serves as a resource for preclinical studies on difficult-to-treat breast tumors.
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