| Literature DB >> 27212702 |
Masayuki Fujii1, Mariko Shimokawa2, Shoichi Date3, Ai Takano2, Mami Matano2, Kosaku Nanki2, Yuki Ohta2, Kohta Toshimitsu2, Yoshihiro Nakazato2, Kenta Kawasaki2, Toshio Uraoka4, Toshiaki Watanabe5, Takanori Kanai2, Toshiro Sato6.
Abstract
Colorectal tumor is a heterogeneous disease, with varying clinical presentation and prognosis in patients. To establish a platform encompassing this diversity, we generated 55 colorectal tumor organoid lines from a range of histological subtypes and clinical stages, including rare subtypes. Each line was defined by gene expression signatures and optimized for organoid culture according to niche factor requirements. In vitro and in xenografts, the organoids reproduced the histopathological grade and differentiation capacity of their parental tumors. Notably, we found that niche-independent growth is predominantly associated with the adenoma-carcinoma transition reflecting accumulation of multiple mutations. For matched pairs of primary and metastatic organoids, which had similar genetic profiles and niche factor requirements, the metastasis-derived organoids exhibited higher metastatic capacity. These observations underscore the importance of genotype-phenotype analyses at a single-patient level and the value of our resource to provide insights into colorectal tumorigenesis and patient-centered therapeutic development.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27212702 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2016.04.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 24.633