CRISPR technology may one day lead the field in turning off genetic mutations that cause numerous diseases, such as lung cancer. CURE spoke with Monte Winslow, Ph.D., about CRISPR's current use in mouse models.
Monte Winslow, PhD
Monte Winslow, PhD
Researchers are hoping that one day they will be able to turn off mutated genes for patients with malignancies such as lung cancer, thanks to the gene-editing technology of CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats).
CRISPR technology allows for editing or alteration of a cell’s genome, and inactivating or repairing genes as needed by changing the DNA sequences.
In the lab, researchers are currently exploring the diversity of various tumor genotypes in mouse models to learn more about cancer biology and exactly how mutated genes impact lung cancer progression, according to Monte Winslow, Ph.D., assistant professor, Department of Genetics and Department of Pathology at Stanford Medicine. Moreover, he adds, they are exploring mutated genes to determine which ones are associated with drug sensitivity.
In an interview with Winslow, he shared the work on CRISPR being developed in his lab, and how this technology might help advance treatment for the non-driver NSCLC population.The main thing that we are interested in doing is developing model systems where we can generate many different types of tumors in mouse models. These are very important cancer genes. Can we create mouse models of human cancer? We have a diversity of different genes mutated. We are looking at the diversity of different genotypes of tumors in individual mice so we can first learn about the biology of how these genes being mutated impacts cancer development, or cancer progression, in the lung.
Secondly, we want to use these models to understand if there are certain genes, when mutated, in the human disease that might lead to sensitivity to different therapies. These might be therapies that are already FDA approved for other cancer types, but we don’t know if there are some rare genotypes of tumors that are going to be exceptional responders to these sorts of drugs. It helps that these platforms we are developing can help prioritize to get to patients with the right genotypes of tumors. It is a very interesting history of CRISPR; it is originally from various model organ systems where they discovered it. Then, it’s applied now to this genome engineering, where it’s quite easy to engineer these components to create breaks in the DNA. Those breaks can be repaired in a way where the gene is now inactivated.
So, as far as the cancer modeling side, what we have been involved in is trying to harness this CRISPR system to be able to inactivate genes in these sort of cancer models. Other people have also contributed to this field, so that has been a real advance. Before being able to do these things, it would really take years or longer to look at a function of any individual gene in a cancer model. Now, we can look at tens of genes in the same amount of time, and that has really been a huge advance. Our hope now is to do more of that— more efficient, quantitative ways and then start applying these question of looking for different drug sensitivities, which is a very open question. Lots of people are interested in it.
For us, with these types of systems, we want to address this in tumors growing in vivo, not in cell lines that are growing in petri dishes in the lab but rather in an animal, or sort of host. This is where we’ll acknowledge that what we’re looking at is how they grow in these mouse model systems, but it’s pretty close to people. So, we hope we are going to gain some insight to this sort of therapy. Certainly, people are using CRISPR to inactivate genes of interest in cancer cell lines or different type of models. There is going to be some benefit to doing these mouse systems because this is the only system where you can initiate tumors from a single cell — in this case, the mouse lung — and it will develop all the way to being metastatic lung adenocarcinoma. With a lot of these other systems, every system has its own advantages and disadvantages, so we think that is a major advantage here—that all of that happens naturally in vivo. Whereas, all of the human systems will be transplanting into mice or growing in vitro. They have the advantage of being human, but there are some disadvantages related to that. Most of my lab is interested in understanding the mechanisms that drive metastasis. Not tumor growth and how big they get, but whether they gain these characteristics that allow them to leave the primary tumor, spread around and form these metastases in distant organs. What we are doing there is quite basic science. How did the cells change to be able to do that? What are the requirements for it to grow in distant sites? It is something we find interesting; whether that becomes targetable is another question.
If you can block metastasis with a small molecule, are there patient populations that will benefit from this? This is what we're taking to our clinical colleagues at Stanford Medicine about because we think it’s really interesting. Again, it might be a small fraction of patients, but metastasis is a really terrible part of the disease, so that’s our other main interest.
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