4.7 Article

Pancreatic cancer modeling using retrograde viral vector delivery and in vivo CRISPR/Cas9-mediated somatic genome editing

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 29, Issue 14, Pages 1576-1585

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gad.264861.115

Keywords

CRISPR; genome editing; mouse model; pancreatic cancer

Funding

  1. Pancreas Cancer Action Network-American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) [13-20-25-WINS]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01-CA175336, NIH R21-CA194910]
  3. NIH [K08-CA172676, R01-CA175336-S1, T32HG000044, T32CA09302, F32-CA189659]
  4. Pancreas Cancer Action Network-AACR
  5. Sidney Kimmel Foundation for Cancer Research
  6. Stanford Cancer Institute from the National Cancer Institute [P30-CA124435]
  7. Stanford Dean's Fellowships
  8. American Lung Association Fellowship
  9. Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  10. National Science Foundation
  11. Pancreatic Cancer Action Network-AACR [14-40-25-GRUE]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a genomically diverse, prevalent, and almost invariably fatal malignancy. Although conventional genetically engineered mouse models of human PDAC have been instrumental in understanding pancreatic cancer development, these models are much too labor-intensive, expensive, and slow to perform the extensive molecular analyses needed to adequately understand this disease. Here we demonstrate that retrograde pancreatic ductal injection of either adenoviral-Cre or lentiviral-Cre vectors allows titratable initiation of pancreatic neoplasias that progress into invasive and metastatic PDAC. To enable in vivo CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene inactivation in the pancreas, we generated a Cre-regulated Cas9 allele and lentiviral vectors that express Cre and a single-guide RNA. CRISPR-mediated targeting of Lkb1 in combination with oncogenic Kras expression led to selection for inactivating genomic alterations, absence of Lkb1 protein, and rapid tumor growth that phenocopied Cre-mediated genetic deletion of Lkb1. This method will transform our ability to rapidly interrogate gene function during the development of this recalcitrant cancer.

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