Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Tsunedomi Ryouichi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 1000361639
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Establishment of a novel experimental model for muscle-invasive bladder cancer using a dog bladder cancer organoid culture

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Mohamed Elbadawy
Tatsuya Usui
Takashi Mori
Ryouichi Tsunedomi
Shoichi Hazama
Rina Nabeta
Tsuyoshi Uchide
Ryuji Fukushima
Toshinori Yoshida
Makoto Shibutani
Takaharu Tanaka
Sosuke Masuda
Rena Okada
Ryo Ichikawa
Tsutomu Omatsu
Tetsuya Mizutani
Yukie Katayama
Shunsuke Noguchi
Satomi Iwai
Takayuki Nakagawa
Yuta Shinohara
Masahiro Kaneda
Hideyuki Yamawaki
Kazuaki Sasaki

Summary

In human and dogs, bladder cancer (BC) is the most common neoplasm affecting the urinary tract. Dog BC resembles human muscle-invasive BC in histopathological characteristics and gene expression profiles, and could be an important research model for this disease. Cancer patient-derived organoid culture can recapitulate organ structures and maintains the gene expression profiles of original tumor tissues. In a previous study, we generated dog prostate cancer organoids using urine samples, however dog BC organoids had never been produced. Therefore we aimed to generate dog BC organoids using urine samples and check their histopathological characteristics, drug sensitivity, and gene expression profiles. Organoids from individual BC dogs were successfully generated, expressed urothelial cell markers (CK7, CK20, and UPK3A) and exhibited tumorigenesis in vivo. In a cell viability assay, the response to combined treatment with a range of anticancer drugs (cisplatin, vinblastine, gemcitabine or piroxicam) was markedly different in each BC organoid. In RNA-sequencing analysis, expression levels of basal cell markers (CK5 and DSG3) and several novel genes (MMP28, CTSE, CNN3, TFPI2, COL17A1, and AGPAT4) were upregulated in BC organoids compared with normal bladder tissues or two-dimensional (2D) BC cell lines. These established dog BC organoids might be a useful tool, not only to determine suitable chemotherapy for BC diseased dogs but also to identify novel biomarkers in human muscle-invasive BC. In the present study, for the 1st time, dog BC organoids were generated and several specifically upregulated organoid genes were identified. Our data suggest that dog BC organoids might become a new tool to provide fresh insights into both dog BC therapy and diagnostic biomarkers.

Magazine(name)

Cancer Science

Publisher

 

Volume

110

Number Of Pages

9

StartingPage

2806

EndingPage

2821

Date of Issue

2019-09

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1111/cas.14118

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID