| Literature DB >> 35449581 |
Ji Wang1, Chao Chen2,3,4, Lu Wang1, Mingjun Xie5,6, Xinyang Ge7, Sufan Wu1, Yong He4,5,6,8, Xiaozhou Mou1, Chenyang Ye3,4,9, Yi Sun1.
Abstract
Cancer immunotherapy has revolutionized the field of cancer treatment in recent years. However, not all patients receiving cancer immunotherapy exhibit durable responses, and reliable, high-throughput testing platforms are urgently needed to guide personalized cancer immunotherapy. The ability of patient-derived tumor organoids to recapitulate pivotal features of original cancer tissues makes them useful as a preclinical model for cancer research and precision medicine. Nevertheless, many challenges exist in the translation of tumor organoid research to clinical decision making. Herein we discuss the applications of patient-derived tumor organoid models and the advances and potential of using complex immune-organoid systems as testing platforms to facilitate precision cancer immunotherapy. In addition, we highlight intriguing applications of tumor organoids with novel multi-omics in preclinical cancer research, highlighting genetic editing, proteomics, and liquid biopsy.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; exosome (vesicle); multi-omics; precision medicine; proteomics; tumor microenvironment (TME); tumor organoid
Year: 2022 PMID: 35449581 PMCID: PMC9016336 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.872531
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Overview of currently established tumor organoid-immune cell co-culture systems.
| Co-culture approach | Tissue of origin | Sample type | Species | Immune cell type | Duration (days) | Functionality | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Holistic approach | MC38 CRC cell line/Melanoma | Cell implantation orthotopically/Surgical specimens | MDOTS/PDOTS | T cells, B cells, granulocytic, monocytic lineages, dendritic cells, | 9 days | Preserve immune cell reaction to immune checkpoint inhibitors | ( |
| MC38 CRC cell line | Subcutaneous mouse tumors | MDOTS | T cells | 5 days | Preserve immune cell reaction to CDK4 and CDK6 inhibitors plus immune checkpoint inhibitors | ( | |
| Colon, pancreas, and lung (14 distinct tissue sites) | Subcutaneous mouse tumors/Surgical specimens | MDOTS/PDOTS | Macrophages, T cells, NK cells, and B cells | 30 days | Preserve the TCR repertoire of the original fresh tumor | ( | |
| CRC or lung cancer | Surgical specimens | PDOTS | CD45+ tumour-resident leukocytes | >10 days | ( | ||
| Breast | Surgical specimens | PDOTS | Peripheral blood and tumour-derived γδ T cells | 2-3 w | Preserve γδ T cell activation and tumour cell line cytolysis | ( | |
| Reconstitution approach | Gastric cancer | Triple-transgenic mouse model | MDOTS | CD8+ splenocytes and bone marrow-derived DCs | 2 days | Organoid cytolysis | ( |
| Pancreatic cancer | Surgical specimens | PDOTS | peripheral blood lymphocytes & CAFs | 6 days | Tumor-dependent lymphocyte infiltration and activation of myofibroblast-like CAFs | ( |
MDOTS, murine-derived organotypic tumor spheroids; PDOTS, patient-derived organotypic tumor spheroids;
CAFs, cancer-associated fibroblasts.
Figure 1Complex culture system and possibilities for tumor organoids in cancer immunotherapy research. Complex immune organoid culture systems including fibroblasts, various immune cells, and vasculature in addition to tumor organoids could be leveraged to serve as platforms for testing cancer immunotherapy. Various state-of-the-art technologies can be used in combination with complex tumor organoid culture systems to propel precision medicine. The figure was generated on Biorender.com.