1. Deep learning-based characterization of the drug tolerant persister cell state in lung cancer.
- Author
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Wu, Wei, Cech, Lauren, Olivas, Victor, Zaman, Aubhishek, Kerr, Daniel Lucas, and Bivona, Trever G
- Subjects
Cancer ,Lung ,Lung Cancer ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Aetiology ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors - Abstract
141 Background: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related lethality globally. Targeted therapies improve the clinical outcome of cancer treatment; however, a subpopulation of cancer cells survive during initial therapy and evolve into drug tolerant persister cells (DTPs) that maintain a residual disease reservoir. Residual disease preludes acquired resistance and tumor progression; therefore, identifying and eliminating DTPs could benefit future treatment paradigms. We have shown that Hippo pathway effector YAP1 (Yes Associated Protein-1) is activated in oncogene-driven lung cancers when cancer cells are exposed to various targeted therapies, such as EGFR, ALK, and RAS inhibitors. YAP1 transcriptional activation during targeted therapy is characterized by its increased nuclear localization and interaction with transcription factors. This activation promotes the expression of genes involved in cell survival, cellular plasticity, and metabolic reprogramming at the residual disease state. We hypothesized that detection of intrinsic or acquired persister cells may aid the development of optimized treatment regimens. In this study, we are building image-based deep learning models to identify YAP1 activation-mediated DTPs from histologically stained slides. Methods: H&E or YAP-stained immunohistochemistry (IHC) images from clinical lung cancer and patient-derived tumor xenograft samples were collected throughout targeted therapy and were annotated with semi-automation using high performance computing clusters. A deep learning model (U-Net algorithm) was used for image segmentation, training, validation, and testing. Results: 1638 images were annotated and over 80,000 patches from these images for YAP positive cells (or regions of interest) comprised the training dataset with semi-supervised automation. Subsequently, we built a customized deep-learning model to detect YAP-mediated DTP cell states from whole histopathological image slides. The deep learning-based model achieved excellent accuracy of 0.8238 and 0.9091 in training, and 0.8040 and 0.8949 in validation datasets for two different annotations, respectively. For a test dataset, the model obtained 0.81 and 0.902 accuracy for the two annotations, respectively. Conclusions: We have constructed a deep learning convolutional neural network model to infer the presence of the YAP1 activation-mediated drug tolerant persister cell state prior to or during targeted treatment of lung cancer. Implementing our AI-based model into routine lung cancer care in the future could identify patient subpopulations with YAP1 activated tumors who would most benefit from receiving YAP1-targeted small molecule inhibitors.
- Published
- 2023