Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SelfOrg (Addressing the role of self-organization in tumor heterogeneity and plasticity)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2025-04-01 do 2027-03-31
Current research suggests that tumor plasticity is driven by microenvironmental cues, where external signals induce specific cell states within localized tumor niches. However, my preliminary data reveal that cancer cells also possess an intrinsic ability to self-organize and establish heterogeneity even in the absence of external signals. SelfOrg will tackle the unexplored contribution of self-organization to tumor heterogeneity and plasticity. To do so, I will combine quantitative measurements in bioengineered human organoids with physiologically relevant mouse tumor models to dissect the intrinsic mechanochemical signals regulating tumor heterogeneity. The project is divided in three main aims:
- Aim 1: To quantitatively characterize the self-organization of colon organoids representing different stages of tumor progression.
- Aim 2: To identify the molecular mechanisms driving tumor self-organization and their role in vivo.
- Aim 3: To quantify the heterogeneity in self-organization of a PDO biobank and to assess its correlation with tumor clinicopathological features.
Overall, SelfOrg will dissect how intrinsic mechanochemical interactions among epithelial cells drive the formation of a homeostatic tissue and how this program deteriorates during tumor progression. Through a quantitative biology framework, we will systematically quantify, classify, and mechanistically understand the self-organization programs that pattern human tumors, uncover how they interact with the microenvironment, and assess their predictive value for patient outcomes. Ultimately, EvoSelf will establish self-organization as a fundamental principle of tumor biology
During the six months of duration of SelfOrg, I have advanced three research lines that tackle this question from different angles:
1. I worked on the preliminary data presented in SelfOrg on mouse tumor organoids. I analysed in vitro and in vivo experiments, and I wrote a manuscript with the main findings. This manuscript is currently under review and has been posted as a preprint in bioRxiv:
Pérez-González C*†, Bruckner D*, Di-Luoffo M, Richon S, Goswami R, Baghdadi M, Piastra-Facon F, Felsenthal N, Fumagalli A, Bouras R, van der Net M, Gloerich M, Salvatore G, Guck J, van Rheenen J, Guillermet-Guibert J, Hannezo E, Vignjevic DM. Self-organization of tumor heterogeneity and plasticity. bioRxiv 2025.10.09.681487 (2025)
2. The results in mouse organoids mentioned above constitute a proof of concept of tumor self-organization. SelfOrg will explore this concept in human colorectal tumors. I have been working on optimizing the culture of human colon organoid as monolayers on soft substrates compatible with force measurements. Furthermore, I designed CRISPR-Cas9 strategies to generate live-reporters of different cell state markers. Due to the early termination of the phellowship, most initial aims were not yet achieved.
3. I have been working on obtaining a patient-derived organoid (PDO) cohort of colorectal cancer in collaboration with the group of Prof. Alberto Muñoz (CSIC-UAM). In the upcoming weeks we will receive 20 organoid lines to study the intertumor heterogeneity in self-organization.