Integrative Multi-OMICs Identifies Therapeutic Response Biomarkers and Confirms Fidelity of Clinically Annotated, Serially Passaged Patient-Derived Xenografts Established from Primary and Metastatic Pediatric and AYA Solid Tumors

Author:

Pandya Pankita H.ORCID,Jannu Asha Jacob,Bijangi-Vishehsaraei Khadijeh,Dobrota Erika,Bailey Barbara J.,Barghi Farinaz,Shannon Harlan E.,Riyahi Niknam,Damayanti Nur P.,Young Courtney,Malko Rada,Justice Ryli,Albright Eric,Sandusky George E.ORCID,Wurtz L. Daniel,Collier Christopher D.,Marshall Mark S.,Gallagher Rosa I.,Wulfkuhle Julia D.,Petricoin Emanuel F.,Coy Kathy,Trowbridge Melissa,Sinn Anthony L.,Renbarger Jamie L.,Ferguson Michael J.,Huang Kun,Zhang Jie,Saadatzadeh M. RezaORCID,Pollok Karen E.

Abstract

Establishment of clinically annotated, molecularly characterized, patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) from treatment-naïve and pretreated patients provides a platform to test precision genomics-guided therapies. An integrated multi-OMICS pipeline was developed to identify cancer-associated pathways and evaluate stability of molecular signatures in a panel of pediatric and AYA PDXs following serial passaging in mice. Original solid tumor samples and their corresponding PDXs were evaluated by whole-genome sequencing, RNA-seq, immunoblotting, pathway enrichment analyses, and the drug–gene interaction database to identify as well as cross-validate actionable targets in patients with sarcomas or Wilms tumors. While some divergence between original tumor and the respective PDX was evident, majority of alterations were not functionally impactful, and oncogenic pathway activation was maintained following serial passaging. CDK4/6 and BETs were prioritized as biomarkers of therapeutic response in osteosarcoma PDXs with pertinent molecular signatures. Inhibition of CDK4/6 or BETs decreased osteosarcoma PDX growth (two-way ANOVA, p < 0.05) confirming mechanistic involvement in growth. Linking patient treatment history with molecular and efficacy data in PDX will provide a strong rationale for targeted therapy and improve our understanding of which therapy is most beneficial in patients at diagnosis and in those already exposed to therapy.

Funder

NICHD/NIH Specialized Centers in Research in Pediatric Developmental Pharmacology

NIH/NCI Cancer Center Support Grant

The Tyler Trent Cancer Research Endowment for the Riley Hospital for Children IU-Health

The Indiana University Grand Challenge Precision Health Initiative-Pre-Sarcoma/Sarcoma Pillar

the Riley Children’s Foundation

Curing Kids Cancer

Morgan Adams Foundation

Sarcoma Foundation of America

the Caroline Symmes Cancer Endowment

the Wells Center for Pediatric Research Support for Clinical/Translational Research

the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute

the American Cancer Society Institutional Research Grant

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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