Patient-derived organoid xenografts reveal the multifaceted role of the lncRNA MALAT1 in breast cancer progression
Aggarwal, D.; Russo, S.; Anderson, K.; Floyd, T.; Utama, R.; Rouse, J. A.; Naik, P.; Pawlak, S.; Iyer, S. V.; Kramer, M.; Satpathy, S.; Wilkinson, J. E.; Gao, Q.; Bhatia, S.; Arun, G.; Akerman, M.; McCombie, W. R.; Revenko, A.; Kostroff, K.; Spector, D. L.
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BackgroundLong non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have emerged as key regulators of tumor biology, however, thus far none have translated to cancer therapies. The lncRNA MALAT1 is overexpressed in more than 20 cancers, including breast cancer and has been shown to function via various mechanisms in a context-dependent manner, in 2D cell lines and mouse models. However, its functional role and therapeutic potential have not been evaluated in clinically relevant patient-derived models. MethodsWe investigated the therapeutic potential of a MALAT1-targeting antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) for breast cancer, using clinically relevant 3D human patient-derived organoids (PDOs) and PDO-xenograft (PDO-X) models. We systematically evaluated the efficiency of MALAT1-targeting ASOs using a biobank of 28 PDO models. Using three independent PDO-X models of triple negative breast cancer (TNBC), we targeted MALAT1 in vivo to study its impact on transcription, alternative splicing, stromal remodeling and metastasis. ResultsAcross PDO-X models, MALAT1 depletion reproducibly drove widespread alternative splicing changes across all event types, particularly intron retention events, accompanied by modest gene expression alterations. Differentially spliced transcripts were enriched for targets of shared cancer-associated transcription factors, and MALAT1 knockdown altered the relative abundance of previously unannotated splicing isoforms. Beyond tumor-intrinsic effects, tumor-specific MALAT1 depletion induced a consistent reduction in macrophage-associated gene signatures and reduced lung metastatic burden. ConclusionsOur data define MALAT1s multifaceted role in TNBC, coordinating alternative splicing, transcriptional fine-tuning, tumor-stroma crosstalk, and metastatic progression. Our study provides strong preclinical evidence supporting MALAT1-targeted ASO therapy and establishes PDO-X models as a clinically relevant platform for functional interrogation of TNBC therapies.
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