Cancers (Oct 2021)

<i>CDKN2A</i>-Mutated Pancreatic Ductal Organoids from Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells to Model a Cancer Predisposition Syndrome

  • Jessica Merkle,
  • Markus Breunig,
  • Maximilian Schmid,
  • Chantal Allgöwer,
  • Jana Krüger,
  • Michael K. Melzer,
  • Susanne Bens,
  • Reiner Siebert,
  • Lukas Perkhofer,
  • Ninel Azoitei,
  • Thomas Seufferlein,
  • Sandra Heller,
  • Matthias Meier,
  • Martin Müller,
  • Alexander Kleger,
  • Meike Hohwieler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13205139
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 20
p. 5139

Abstract

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Patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) provide a unique platform to study hereditary disorders and predisposition syndromes by resembling germline mutations of affected individuals and by their potential to differentiate into nearly every cell type of the human body. We employed plucked human hair from two siblings with a family history of cancer carrying a pathogenic CDKN2A variant, P16-p.G101W/P14-p.R115L, to generate patient-specific iPSCs in a cancer-prone ancestry for downstream analytics. The differentiation capacity to pancreatic progenitors and to pancreatic duct-like organoids (PDLOs) according to a recently developed protocol remained unaffected. Upon inducible expression of KRASG12Dusing a piggyBac transposon system in CDKN2A-mutated PDLOs, we revealed structural and molecular changes in vitro, including disturbed polarity and epithelial-to-mesenchymal (EMT) transition. CDKN2A-mutated KRASG12DPDLO xenotransplants formed either a high-grade precancer lesion or a partially dedifferentiated PDAC-like tumor. Intriguingly, P14/P53/P21 and P16/RB cell-cycle checkpoint controls have been only partly overcome in these grafts, thereby still restricting the tumorous growth. Hereby, we provide a model for hereditary human pancreatic cancer that enables dissection of tumor initiation and early development starting from patient-specific CDKN2A-mutated pluripotent stem cells.

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