# Therapeutic Management of Lineage- and Differentiation-state Plasticity

> **NIH NIH U54** · OREGON HEALTH & SCIENCE UNIVERSITY · 2020 · $404,624

## Abstract

ABSTRACT – Project 1 
Intratumoral heterogeneity is a major cause of therapeutic resistance in breast cancer. Studies have 
demonstrated that a subset of cancer cells within a heterogeneous tumor can escape therapy-induced death 
due to innate or adaptive resistance, resulting in recurrence, disease progression, and poor patient survival. 
Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive disease characterized by high intratumor heterogeneity 
and poor patient outcome. In preliminary experiments, we identified subpopulations of tumor cells in primary 
TNBC as well as in basal-like TNBC cell lines that are characterized by differential expression of luminal, basal, 
and mesenchymal differentiation-state markers. We have observed that distinct classes of targeted 
therapeutics have the capacity to eliminate or enrich specific differentiation-state subpopulations within these 
lines, steering heterogeneous cancer cell populations toward increased homogeneity. Importantly, we identified 
synergistic combinatorial treatments that targeted either pathway dependencies predicted by master regulator 
analysis of residual cells or epigenetic regulators found to contribute to a cell's transition to a resistant state. 
The overall goal of this project, therefore, is to understand cell intrinsic regulation of therapeutic response in 
phenotypically heterogeneous TNBC in order to develop targeting strategies to kill all co-existing 
subpopulations. We focus on phenotypic heterogeneity, as this can represent the combination of genetic and 
epigenetic factors, and we will take advantage of clinically relevant therapeutics that drive heterogeneous 
populations toward homogeneity. We hypothesize that a systems biology approach of measuring and 
computationally modeling the functional pathways underlying phenotypic state changes in response 
to state-aggregating therapeutics will reveal common escape routes and regulators of cell plasticity, 
which will allow us to predict effective combinatorial therapeutic strategies that eliminate all cancer 
subpopulations. We will address this hypothesis by (1) examining and computationally modeling phenotype 
state changes in multiple genetically diverse, heterogeneous TNBC cell lines in response to targeted 
therapeutics that induce homogeneity using high-content imaging and single cell expression analysis, (2) 
determining whether clonal expansion or differentiation state plasticity drives the dynamic phenotype changes 
following targeted therapy and modeling the molecular network changes that underlie these transitions, and (3) 
determining epigenetic regulation underlying state transitions and developing combinatorial strategies that 
overcome therapeutic resistance in heterogeneous TNBC cells in vitro and in vivo. Together, these aims 
support our goal to measure and model cell intrinsic responses to clinically relevant targeted therapeutics and 
to predict synergistic drug combinations that more effectively control ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9964680
- **Project number:** 5U54CA209988-04
- **Recipient organization:** OREGON HEALTH & SCIENCE UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** ROSALIE C SEARS
- **Activity code:** U54 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $404,624
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2020-05-01 → 2022-04-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9964680

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9964680, Therapeutic Management of Lineage- and Differentiation-state Plasticity (5U54CA209988-04). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9964680. Licensed CC0.

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