| Literature DB >> 31108870 |
Jumpei Kondo1, Masahiro Inoue2.
Abstract
Drug screening-i.e., testing the effects of a number of drugs in multiple cell lines-is used for drug discovery and development, and can also be performed to evaluate the heterogeneity of a disease entity. Notably, intertumoral heterogeneity is a large hurdle to overcome for establishing standard cancer treatment, necessitating disease models better than conventional established 2D cell lines for screening novel treatment candidates. In the present review, we outline recent progress regarding experimental cancer models having more physiological and clinical relevance for drug screening, which are important for the successful evaluation of cellular response to drugs. The review is particularly focused on drug screening using the cancer organoid model, which is emerging as a better physiological disease model than conventional established 2D cell lines. We also review the use of cancer organoids to examine intertumor and intratumor heterogeneity, and introduce the perspective of the clinical use of cancer organoids to enable precision medicine.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cell lines; drug screening; heterogeneity; organoid; precision medicine; spheroid
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31108870 PMCID: PMC6562517 DOI: 10.3390/cells8050470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Pros and cons of disease models.
| Model | Accessibility | Feasibility | Intertumor | Intratumor | Physiological | Applicability to HTS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell lines |
| Good | Good | Allows comparison between cell lines | Poor | Largely lost | Good |
|
| Good | Complex in some systems with biomaterials | Allows comparison between cell lines | Poor | Partially reestablished | Difficult for some cell lines | |
| Animal models |
| Relatively good once generated | Laborious for double or triple GEMs | Partially allows comparison | Good | Good, including microenvironment and immune system | Not suitable for HTS |
|
| Requires access to hospital or tissue network | Good once established | Allows comparison between multiple cases | Good | Good, including microenvironment | Not suitable for HTS | |
| Organoids |
| Requires access to hospital or tissue network | Requires skills, may suffer from low recovery rate | Allows comparison between multiple cases | Good (may select for cells resistant to anoikis) | Good | Possible but costly |
|
| Requires access to hospital or tissue network | Requires skills | Allows comparison between multiple cases | Good | Good | Good as an ex vivo setting | |
HTS, high-throughput screening; GEM, genetically modified models; PDX, patient-derived xenografts; CSC, cancer stem cell; CTOS, cancer tissue-originated spheroid.
Summary of reports of drug screening with organoid methods.
| Cancer type | Organoid Type | Library | # Compounds Tested | # Cases Tested | Assay Conditions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colorectal | CSC-derived | Target-known inhibitors + chemo drugs | 83 | 19 | With 2% BME in culture medium on BME | [ |
| Breast | CSC-derived | EGFR/AKT/mTORC pathway inhibitors | 6 | 28 | With 2% BME in culture medium on BME | [ |
| Gastric | CSC-derived | Approved anti-cancer drugs | 37 | 7 | On 50% Matrigel | [ |
| Bladder | CSC-derived | Target-known inhibitors + chemo drugs | 50 | 11 | With 2% Matrigel in culture medium | [ |
| Liver | CSC-derived | NCI-Approved Oncology Drugs Set VII | 129 | 5 | In Matrigel | [ |
| Various | CSC-derived | Chemo drugs and targeted agents under clinical development | 160 (single) + 120 (combination) | 4 | 2D culture of organoids for screening | [ |
| Ovarian | CSC-derived | Target-known inhibitors + chemo drugs | 22 | 10 | With 2% Matrigel in culture medium on Matrigel | [ |
| Colorectal | CSC-derived * | Target-known inhibitors + chemo drugs | 8 | 19 | In Matrigel | [ |
| Endometrial | CTOS | Target-known inhibitors | 79 | 5 (2 hit drugs evaluated in 12 CTOS lines) | w/o matrix | [ |
| Colorectal | CTOS | Target-known inhibitors | 71 | 1 | w/o matrix | [ |
| Colorectal | CTOS | Target-known inhibitors + FDA-approved drugs | 2427 | 2 (15 hit drugs evaluated in 30 CTOS lines) | w/o matrix | [ |
* Prepared by CTOS method. CSC, cancer stem cell; CTOS, cancer tissue-originated spheroid; BME, basement membrane extract.
Figure 1Preparation of cancer stem-like cell (CSC)-derived organoids and cancer tissue-originated spheroids (CTOSs). In both methods, tumor specimens are mechanically and enzymatically digested. To generate CSC-derived organoids, tumor tissues are dispersed at the single-cell level, and organoid formation occurs by either re-aggregation or clonal proliferation. Optionally, incompletely dissociated fragments trapped by filters are further trypsinized to recover more single cells. In contrast, to generate CTOSs, tumor tissues are incompletely digested into fragments on purpose by milder conditions. These cell clusters rapidly form spherical-shaped CTOSs within 24 h. Because the cell-cell contact is retained during the preparation process, CTOS could better recover heterogenous cells including those at non-CSC state by avoiding anoikis, On the other hand, CSC-derived organoids could better enrich the cells with cancer-stem like property. However, it remains an open question whether the cells obtained by these different methods are interchangeable or not.