Human enteroids as a tool to study conventional and ultra-high dose rate radiation

Author:

Klett Katarina C1,Martin-Villa Briana C2,Villarreal Victoria S3,Melemenidis Stavros4,Viswanathan Vignesh4,Manjappa Rakesh4,Ashraf M Ramish4,Soto Luis4,Lau Brianna4,Dutt Suparna4,Rankin Erinn B456,Loo Billy W46,Heilshorn Sarah C3

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford, CA , USA

2. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University , Stanford, CA , USA

3. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford University , Stanford, CA , USA

4. Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford, CA , USA

5. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford, CA , USA

6. Stanford Cancer Institute, Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford, CA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Radiation therapy, one of the most effective therapies to treat cancer, is highly toxic to healthy tissue. The delivery of radiation at ultra-high dose rates, FLASH radiation therapy (FLASH), has been shown to maintain therapeutic anti-tumor efficacy while sparing normal tissues compared to conventional dose rate irradiation (CONV). Though promising, these studies have been limited mainly to murine models. Here, we leveraged enteroids, three-dimensional cell clusters that mimic the intestine, to study human-specific tissue response to radiation. We observed enteroids have a greater colony growth potential following FLASH compared with CONV. In addition, the enteroids that reformed following FLASH more frequently exhibited proper intestinal polarity. While we did not observe differences in enteroid damage across groups, we did see distinct transcriptomic changes. Specifically, the FLASH enteroids upregulated the expression of genes associated with the WNT-family, cell-cell adhesion, and hypoxia response. These studies validate human enteroids as a model to investigate FLASH and provide further evidence supporting clinical study of this therapy. Insight Box Promising work has been done to demonstrate the potential of ultra-high dose rate radiation (FLASH) to ablate cancerous tissue, while preserving healthy tissue. While encouraging, these findings have been primarily observed using pre-clinical murine and traditional two-dimensional cell culture. This study validates the use of human enteroids as a tool to investigate human-specific tissue response to FLASH. Specifically, the work described demonstrates the ability of enteroids to recapitulate previous in vivo findings, while also providing a lens through which to probe cellular and molecular-level responses to FLASH. The human enteroids described herein offer a powerful model that can be used to probe the underlying mechanisms of FLASH in future studies.

Funder

California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

National Institutes of Health

Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University School of Medicine

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Biochemistry,Biophysics

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