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GIORGIO STASSI

Mex3a marks drug-tolerant persister colorectal cancer cells that mediate relapse after chemotherapy

  • Authors: Álvarez-Varela, Adrián; Novellasdemunt, Laura; Barriga, Francisco M.; Hernando-Momblona, Xavier; Cañellas-Socias, Adrià; Cano-Crespo, Sara; Sevillano, Marta; Cortina, Carme; Stork, Diana; Morral, Clara; Turon, Gemma; Slebe, Felipe; Jiménez-Gracia, Laura; Caratù, Ginevra; Jung, Peter; Stassi, Giorgio; Heyn, Holger; Tauriello, Daniele V. F.; Mateo, Lidia; Tejpar, Sabine; Sancho, Elena; Stephan-Otto Attolini, Camille; Batlle, Eduard
  • Publication year: 2022
  • Type: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/665843

Abstract

Colorectal cancer (CRC) patient-derived organoids predict responses to chemotherapy. Here we used them to investigate relapse after treatment. Patient-derived organoids expand from highly proliferative LGR5+ tumor cells; however, we discovered that lack of optimal growth conditions specifies a latent LGR5+ cell state. This cell population expressed the gene MEX3A, is chemoresistant and regenerated the organoid culture after treatment. In CRC mouse models, Mex3a+ cells contributed marginally to metastatic outgrowth; however, after chemotherapy, Mex3a+ cells produced large cell clones that regenerated the disease. Lineage-tracing analysis showed that persister Mex3a+ cells downregulate the WNT/stem cell gene program immediately after chemotherapy and adopt a transient state reminiscent to that of YAP+ fetal intestinal progenitors. In contrast, Mex3a-deficient cells differentiated toward a goblet cell-like phenotype and were unable to resist chemotherapy. Our findings reveal that adaptation of cancer stem cells to suboptimal niche environments protects them from chemotherapy and identify a candidate cell of origin of relapse after treatment in CRC.