Academic Thesis

Basic information

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

Title

Hedgehog Signals Mediate Anti-Cancer Drug Resistance in Three-Dimensional Primary Colorectal Cancer Organoid Culture

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Tatsuya Usui
Masashi Sakurai
Koji Umata
Mohamed Elbadawy
Takashi Ohama
Hideyuki Yamawaki
Shoichi Hazama
Hiroko Takenouchi
Masao Nakajima
Ryouichi Tsunedomi
Nobuaki Suzuki
Hiroaki Nagano
Koichi Sato
Masahiro Kaneda
Kazuaki Sasaki

Summary

Colorectal cancer is one of the most common causes of cancer death worldwide. In patients with metastatic colorectal cancer, combination treatment with several anti-cancer drugs is employed and improves overall survival in some patients. Nevertheless, most patients with metastatic disease are not cured owing to the drug resistance. Cancer stem cells are known to regulate resistance to chemotherapy. In the previous study, we established a novel three-dimensional organoid culture model from tumor colorectal tissues of human patients using an air-liquid interface (ALI) method, which contained numerous cancer stem cells and showed resistance to 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and Irinotecan. Here, we investigate which inhibitor for stem cell-related signal improves the sensitivity for anti-cancer drug treatment in tumor ALI organoids. Treatment with Hedgehog signal inhibitors (AY9944, GANT61) decreases the cell viability of organoids compared with Notch (YO-01027, DAPT) and Wnt (WAV939, Wnt-C59) signal inhibitors. Combination treatment of AY9944 or GANT61 with 5-FU, Irinotecan or Oxaliplatin decreases the cell viability of tumor organoids compared with each anti-cancer drug alone treatment. Treatment with AY9944 or GANT61 inhibits expression of stem cell markers c-Myc, CD44 and Nanog, likely through the decrease of their transcription factor, GLI-1 expression. Combination treatment of AY9944 or GANT61 with 5-FU or Irinotecan also prevents colony formation of colorectal cancer cell lines HCT116 and SW480. These findings suggest that Hedgehog signals mediate anti-cancer drug resistance in colorectal tumor patient-derived ALI organoids and that the inhibitors are useful as a combinational therapeutic strategy against colorectal cancer.

Magazine(name)

International journal of molecular sciences

Publisher

 

Volume

19

Number Of Pages

4

StartingPage

E1098

EndingPage

E1098

Date of Issue

2018-04-06

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.3390/ijms19041098

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID