Rao Sneha R, Somarelli Jason A, Altunel Erdem, Selmic Laura E, Byrum Mark, Sheth Maya U, Cheng Serene, Ware Kathryn E, Kim So Young, Prinz Joseph A, Devos Nicolas, Corcoran David L, Moseley Arthur, Soderblom Erik, Hsu S David, Eward William C
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States.
Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States.
Front Oncol. 2020 Feb 11;10:117. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2020.00117. eCollection 2020.
Cancer drug discovery is an inefficient process, with more than 90% of newly-discovered therapies failing to gain regulatory approval. Patient-derived models of cancer offer a promising new approach to identify new treatments; however, for rare cancers, such as sarcomas, access to patient samples is limited, which precludes development of patient-derived models. To address the limited access to patient samples, we have turned to pet dogs with naturally-occurring sarcomas. Although sarcomas make up <1% of all human cancers, sarcomas represent 15% of cancers in dogs. Because dogs have similar immune systems, an accelerated pace of cancer progression, and a shared environment with humans, studying pet dogs with cancer is ideal for bridging gaps between mouse models and human cancers. Here, we present our cross-species personalized medicine pipeline to identify new therapies for sarcomas. We explore this process through the focused study of a pet dog, Teddy, who presented with six synchronous leiomyosarcomas. Using our pipeline we identified proteasome inhibitors as a potential therapy for Teddy. Teddy was treated with bortezomib and showed a varied response across tumors. Whole exome sequencing revealed substantial genetic heterogeneity across Teddy's recurrent tumors and metastases, suggesting that intra-patient heterogeneity and tumoral adaptation were responsible for the heterogeneous clinical response. Ubiquitin proteomics coupled with exome sequencing revealed multiple candidate driver mutations in proteins related to the proteasome pathway. Together, our results demonstrate how the comparative study of canine sarcomas offers important insights into the development of personalized medicine approaches that can lead to new treatments for sarcomas in both humans and canines.
癌症药物研发是一个效率低下的过程,超过90%新发现的疗法无法获得监管批准。癌症患者来源模型为识别新疗法提供了一种有前景的新方法;然而,对于罕见癌症,如肉瘤,获取患者样本受限,这妨碍了患者来源模型的开发。为解决患者样本获取受限的问题,我们转而研究患有自然发生肉瘤的宠物狗。尽管肉瘤在所有人类癌症中占比不到1%,但在狗的癌症中占15%。由于狗具有相似的免疫系统、更快的癌症进展速度以及与人类共享的环境,研究患癌宠物狗对于弥合小鼠模型与人类癌症之间的差距非常理想。在此,我们展示我们的跨物种个性化医疗流程,以识别肉瘤的新疗法。我们通过对一只名为泰迪的宠物狗进行重点研究来探索这一过程,泰迪患有六个同步平滑肌肉瘤。使用我们的流程,我们确定蛋白酶体抑制剂是泰迪的一种潜在疗法。泰迪接受了硼替佐米治疗,不同肿瘤显示出不同反应。全外显子组测序揭示了泰迪复发性肿瘤和转移灶之间存在显著的基因异质性,表明患者内异质性和肿瘤适应性是导致临床反应异质性的原因。泛素蛋白质组学结合外显子组测序揭示了与蛋白酶体途径相关的蛋白质中的多个候选驱动突变。总之,我们的结果表明,对犬肉瘤的比较研究如何为个性化医疗方法的开发提供重要见解,从而为人类和犬类的肉瘤带来新的治疗方法。