A123 CNON-SHERBROOKE NODE: ADVANCING COLORECTAL CANCER RESEARCH WITH ORGANOIDS
S Nassari, M Lecours, J Zhang, F Boudreau

TL;DR
The CNON-Sherbrooke node is advancing colorectal cancer research by creating and optimizing patient-derived organoids and integrating advanced technologies like gene editing and organ-on-a-chip systems.
Contribution
The CNON-Sherbrooke node introduces a CRC PDO biobank and integrates genome editing and microfluidic systems to enhance personalized cancer research.
Findings
The Sherbrooke node is building a CRC PDO biobank using both tumor and healthy tissues for comparative studies.
Advanced gene-editing tools are being refined for human intestinal organoids to model CRC genetic diversity.
Organ-on-a-chip systems are being used to better simulate the tumor microenvironment for drug screening.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major global health issue and the second most common cancer in Canada. Human cancer cell lines have served as the main model for CRC research; however, they do not adequately capture the complexity and heterogeneity of tumors. In the past decade, 3D in vitro models, known as organoids, have emerged as more accurate representations of organs’ structure and function. In cancer research, patient-derived organoids (PDOs) provide an ideal model that mimic the heterogeneity and clinical progression of the disease. However, fine-tuning this model needs numerous optimizations, which differ between laboratories and affect the reproducibility of the data. Additionally, accessing patient tissue for PDOs remains a significant challenge. The Canadian National Organoid Network (CNON), a multicentric (the University of British Colombia, University of Calgary & Université…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsScience, Research, and Medicine
