Trellis Single-Cell Screening Reveals Stromal Regulation of Patient-Derived Organoid Drug Responses (Q6693701)

From MaRDI portal





Dataset published at Zenodo repository.
Language Label Description Also known as
default for all languages
No label defined
    English
    Trellis Single-Cell Screening Reveals Stromal Regulation of Patient-Derived Organoid Drug Responses
    Dataset published at Zenodo repository.

      Statements

      0 references
      Patient-derived organoids (PDOs) can model personalized therapy responses, however current screening technologies cannot reveal drug response mechanisms or how tumor microenvironment cells alter therapeutic performance. To address this, we developed a highly-multiplexed mass cytometry platform to measure post translational modification (PTM) signaling, DNA-damage, cell-cycle activity, and apoptosis in 2,500 colorectal cancer (CRC) PDOs and cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) in response to clinical therapies at single-cell resolution. To compare patient- and microenvironment-specific drug responses in thousands of single-cell datasets, we developed Trellis a highly-scalable, hierarchical tree-based treatment effect analysis method. Trellis single-cell screening revealed that on-target cell-cycle blockage and DNA-damage drug effects are common, even in chemorefractory PDOs. However, drug-induced apoptosis is rare, patient-specific, and aligns with cancer cell PTM signaling. We find that CAFs can regulate cancer cell plasticity shifting proliferative stem cells to slow-cycling revival stem cells via YAP to protect cancer cells from chemotherapy. This repo contains the processed scRNA-seq Scanpy AnnData objects generated from the study. More information describing the data can be found at: https://github.com/TAPE-Lab/Ramos-et-al-Trellis
      0 references
      24 July 2023
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references

      Identifiers

      0 references