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Abstract 251: Identification of therapeutic vulnerabilities by genome-wide CRISPR knockout library screening of colon cancer organoids

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Abstract The promise of precision medicine is based on the idea that genetic alterations present only in tumor cells create vulnerabilities that can be targeted for therapeutic intent. In some instances, somatically mutated driver genes such as KRAS, BRAF or PIK3CA can be targeted with small molecule inhibitors specific for mutant oncoproteins. In other cases therapeutic vulnerability is an indirect consequence, such as response to immune checkpoint inhibitors caused by somatic inactivation of mismatch repair genes and subsequent creation of neo-antigens in tumors. Synthetic lethal vulnerabilities dependent on common somatic alterations would be highly specific therapeutic targets applicable to a large number of cancer patients. We sought to identify potential therapeutic vulnerabilities for colon cancer by performing a genome wide CRISPR knockout screen in a colon cancer organoid in both TP53-Wild-Type and TP53-Knockout backgrounds. We identified 1784 gene knockouts with TP53-dependent effects on Darwinian fitness. Examples include MDM2 and PPM1D knockouts, both of which selectively harmed the TP53 WT organoids. 250 gene knockouts selectively harmed the TP53 KO organoids and represent novel avenues for development of TP53 synthetic lethal targeted therapeutics. We also identified ~1000 gene knockouts under significant negative Darwinian selection in both TP53 WT and TP53 KO organoids which are not known to be common essential genes. Several of these organoid model specific vulnerabilities are in pathways that are downstream of the somatic mutations present in the tumor and are therefore candidates for highly-specific targeted therapeutic intervention. Examples include Werner’s pathway dependencies (WRN, EME1, MUS81) which are known to result from mismatch repair deficiency, WNT pathway dependencies (CTNNB1, PORCN) which result from RNF43 inactivating somatic mutation, and BRAF dependency resulting from its own activating oncogenic somatic mutation. In summary, genome-wide CRISPR knockout library screening of human colon cancer organoids can provide a comprehensive overview of dependencies interacting with either natural or engineered mutations and are a promising novel platform for discovering personalized or pathway based therapeutic targets. Future work will focus on target validation and additional primary screens using our biobank of tumor-normal organoid pairs. Citation Format: Phillip J. Buckhaults, Sana Khalili, Carolyn Banister, Prashanth R. Gokare, Dave Pocalyko, Kurtis Bachman. Identification of therapeutic vulnerabilities by genome-wide CRISPR knockout library screening of colon cancer organoids [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2023; Part 1 (Regular and Invited Abstracts); 2023 Apr 14-19; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(7_Suppl):Abstract nr 251.
Title: Abstract 251: Identification of therapeutic vulnerabilities by genome-wide CRISPR knockout library screening of colon cancer organoids
Description:
Abstract The promise of precision medicine is based on the idea that genetic alterations present only in tumor cells create vulnerabilities that can be targeted for therapeutic intent.
In some instances, somatically mutated driver genes such as KRAS, BRAF or PIK3CA can be targeted with small molecule inhibitors specific for mutant oncoproteins.
In other cases therapeutic vulnerability is an indirect consequence, such as response to immune checkpoint inhibitors caused by somatic inactivation of mismatch repair genes and subsequent creation of neo-antigens in tumors.
Synthetic lethal vulnerabilities dependent on common somatic alterations would be highly specific therapeutic targets applicable to a large number of cancer patients.
We sought to identify potential therapeutic vulnerabilities for colon cancer by performing a genome wide CRISPR knockout screen in a colon cancer organoid in both TP53-Wild-Type and TP53-Knockout backgrounds.
We identified 1784 gene knockouts with TP53-dependent effects on Darwinian fitness.
Examples include MDM2 and PPM1D knockouts, both of which selectively harmed the TP53 WT organoids.
250 gene knockouts selectively harmed the TP53 KO organoids and represent novel avenues for development of TP53 synthetic lethal targeted therapeutics.
We also identified ~1000 gene knockouts under significant negative Darwinian selection in both TP53 WT and TP53 KO organoids which are not known to be common essential genes.
Several of these organoid model specific vulnerabilities are in pathways that are downstream of the somatic mutations present in the tumor and are therefore candidates for highly-specific targeted therapeutic intervention.
Examples include Werner’s pathway dependencies (WRN, EME1, MUS81) which are known to result from mismatch repair deficiency, WNT pathway dependencies (CTNNB1, PORCN) which result from RNF43 inactivating somatic mutation, and BRAF dependency resulting from its own activating oncogenic somatic mutation.
In summary, genome-wide CRISPR knockout library screening of human colon cancer organoids can provide a comprehensive overview of dependencies interacting with either natural or engineered mutations and are a promising novel platform for discovering personalized or pathway based therapeutic targets.
Future work will focus on target validation and additional primary screens using our biobank of tumor-normal organoid pairs.
Citation Format: Phillip J.
Buckhaults, Sana Khalili, Carolyn Banister, Prashanth R.
Gokare, Dave Pocalyko, Kurtis Bachman.
Identification of therapeutic vulnerabilities by genome-wide CRISPR knockout library screening of colon cancer organoids [abstract].
In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2023; Part 1 (Regular and Invited Abstracts); 2023 Apr 14-19; Orlando, FL.
Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(7_Suppl):Abstract nr 251.

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