Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research (Mar 2024)

Anaplastic thyroid cancer spheroids as preclinical models to test therapeutics

  • Jiangnan Hu,
  • Kaili Liu,
  • Chandrayee Ghosh,
  • Tejinder Pal Khaket,
  • Helen Shih,
  • Electron Kebebew

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13046-024-03009-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is the most aggressive thyroid cancer. Despite advances in tissue culture techniques, a robust model for ATC spheroid culture is yet to be developed. In this study, we created an efficient and cost-effective 3D tumor spheroids culture system from human ATC cells and existing cell lines that better mimic patient tumors and that can enhance our understanding of in vivo treatment response. We found that patient-derived ATC cells and cell lines can readily form spheroids in culture with a unique morphology, size, and cytoskeletal organization. We observed both cohesive (dense and solid structures) and discohesive (irregularly shaped structures) spheroids within the same culture condition across different cell lines. BRAF WT ATC spheroids grew in a cohesive pattern, while BRAF V600E -mutant ATC spheroids had a discohesive organization. In the patient-derived BRAF V600E -mutant ATC spheroids, we observed both growth patterns, but mostly the discohesive type. Histologically, ATC spheroids had a similar morphology to the patient’s tumor through H&E staining and proliferation marker staining. Moreover, RNA sequencing analysis revealed that the gene expression profile of tumor cells derived from the spheroids closely matched parental patient tumor-derived cells in comparison to monolayer cultures. In addition, treatment response to combined BRAF and MEK inhibition in BRAF V600E -mutant ATC spheroids exhibited a similar sensitivity to the patient clinical response. Our study provides a robust and novel ex vivo spheroid model system that can be used in both established ATC cell lines and patient-derived tumor samples to better understand the biology of ATC and to test therapeutics.

Keywords