Abstract

Abstract When cancer cells are exposed to lethal doses of targeted therapies, the emergence of a subpopulation of drug-tolerant persister cells (DTPs) is often observed. We previously reported that colorectal cancer (CRC) cells exposed to targeted therapies activate an adaptive mutability stress response, involving DNA damage induction and a switch to low-fidelity DNA replication. Therefore, targeted treatment might lead to increased mutation rate in DTPs, but mutation rates of cancer cells during treatment have not been quantitatively assessed. Here, we combined biological experiments and mathematical modelling to characterize emergence and dynamics of DTPs. From this, we extrapolated parameters governing dynamics of cancer cells populations and designed a modified Luria-Delbrück assay on mammalian cells (MC-LD) to quantify mutations rates of CRC cells under standard growth conditions and during exposure to targeted therapy. We selected mismatch repair proficient CRC cell lines sensitive to different clinically used therapeutic agents, and derived clones to be used for experiments. By monitoring cell dynamics in drug-response growth assays, we found that CRC cells exposed to targeted therapy display a biphasic killing curve reaching a stable plateau, a pattern indicative of emergence of DTPs. By fitting model estimation to population growth assays, we predicted that, even if a subgroup of DTPs predated treatment, the majority of them emerged only upon exposure to targeted therapies. We also observed that DTPs slowly replicate under treatment, as shown by Carboxy fluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE) analysis and staining with 5-ethynyl-2’-deoxyuridine (EdU). We used these population dynamics parameters to design the MC-LD assay. CRC clones were plated in several 96-multiwell plates each, and after an expansion phase in standard culture conditions, treatment was added. After 3-4 weeks, a minority of wells showed growth of resistant colonies: based on the measured growth rates, we could predict that the resistant cells arose before treatment by spontaneous mutation. The remaining wells contained a homogenous population of DTPs. After several weeks of treatment, when pre-treatment resistant clones would have already emerged, late-emerging resistant colonies appeared in a subset of wells in which DTPs had previously been detected. Using the number of residual DTPs and resistant colonies to infer mutation rates, we found a 7- to 50-fold increase (depending on the cell line) in DTPs’ mutation rate compared to sensitive cells.In conclusion, we developed a new assay which allows quantitative comparisons of spontaneous and drug-induced mutation rates in cancer cells and showed that adaptive mutability in DTPs leads to increased mutation rates. This approach could be used to measure whether and how a wide range of environmental conditions affect DTP phenotype and mutation rates in mammalian cells. Citation Format: Alberto Sogari, Mariangela Russo, Simone Pompei, Mattia Corigliano, Giovanni Crisafulli, Andrea Bertotti, Marco Gherardi, Federica Di Nicolantonio, Marco Cosentino Lagomarsino, Alberto Bardelli. A modified Luria-Delbrück assay allows quantification of colorectal cancer persister cells’ mutation rate [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 2613.

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