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Somatic tissue engineering in mouse models reveals an actionable role for WNT pathway alterations in prostate cancer metastasis

  • Josef Leibold
  • , Marcus Ruscetti
  • , Zhen Cao
  • , Yu Jui Ho
  • , Timour Baslan
  • , Min Zou
  • , Wassim Abida
  • , Judith Feucht
  • , Teng Han
  • , Francisco M. Barriga
  • , Kaloyan M. Tsanov
  • , Leah Zamechek
  • , Amanda Kulick
  • , Corina Amor
  • , Sha Tian
  • , Katarzyna Rybczyk
  • , Nelson R. Salgado
  • , Francisco J. Sánchez-Rivera
  • , Philip A. Watson
  • , Elisa De Stanchina
  • John E. Wilkinson, Lukas E. Dow, Cory Abate-Shen, Charles L. Sawyers, Scott W. Lowe

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

To study genetic factors infl uencing the progression and therapeutic responses of advanced prostate cancer, we developed a fast and fl exible system that introduces genetic alterations relevant to human disease directly into the prostate glands of mice using tissue electroporation. These electroporation-based genetically engineered mouse models (EPO-GEMM) recapitulate features of traditional germline models and, by modeling genetic factors linked to latestage human disease, can produce tumors that are metastatic and castration-resistant. A subset of tumors with Trp53 alterations acquired spontaneous WNT pathway alterations, which are also associated with metastatic prostate cancer in humans. Using the EPO-GEMM approach and an orthogonal organoid-based model, we show that WNT pathway activation drives metastatic disease that is sensitive to pharmacologic WNT pathway inhibition. Thus, by leveraging EPO-GEMMs, we reveal a functional role for WNT signaling in driving prostate cancer metastasis and validate the WNT pathway as therapeutic target in metastatic prostate cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: Our understanding of the factors driving metastatic prostate cancer is limited by the paucity of models of late-stage disease. Here, we develop EPO-GEMMs of prostate cancer and use them to identify and validate the WNT pathway as an actionable driver of aggressive metastatic disease.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1038-1057
Number of pages20
JournalCancer Discovery
Volume10
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2020
Externally publishedYes

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