[HTML][HTML] Scientific validation and clinical application of lung cancer organoids

D Lee, Y Kim, C Chung - Cells, 2021 - mdpi.com
D Lee, Y Kim, C Chung
Cells, 2021mdpi.com
Lung cancer organoid (LCO) is a novel model of lung cancer that facilitates drug screening.
However, the success rate of LCOs varies from 7% to 87%, and the culture medium
compositions are markedly different. Airway organoid media can be used for LCO cultures,
but this promotes the overgrowth of normal cell organoids especially in LCOs from
intrapulmonary lesions. Several modified media are specifically utilized for promoting the
cancer cell's growth. For culturing high-purity LCOs, cancer cells from metastatic lesions and …
Lung cancer organoid (LCO) is a novel model of lung cancer that facilitates drug screening. However, the success rate of LCOs varies from 7% to 87%, and the culture medium compositions are markedly different. Airway organoid media can be used for LCO cultures, but this promotes the overgrowth of normal cell organoids especially in LCOs from intrapulmonary lesions. Several modified media are specifically utilized for promoting the cancer cell’s growth. For culturing high-purity LCOs, cancer cells from metastatic lesions and malignant effusions are used. Recently, single-cell RNA sequencing has identified previously unknown cell populations in the lungs and lung cancer. This sequencing technology can be used to validate whether the LCO recapitulates the heterogeneity and functional hierarchy of the primary tumor. Several groups have attempted to culture LCOs with mesenchymal cells and immune cells to recapitulate the tumor microenvironment. Disease modeling using LCO provides novel insight into the pathophysiology of lung cancer and enables high-throughput screening for drug discovery and prognosis prediction. An LCO model would help to identify new concepts as a basis for lung cancer targeting by discovering innovative therapeutic targets.
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