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1.
Science ; 383(6683): eadj1415, 2024 Feb 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38330136

ABSTRACT

Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) and small cell lung cancer (SCLC) are thought to originate from different epithelial cell types in the lung. Intriguingly, LUAD can histologically transform into SCLC after treatment with targeted therapies. In this study, we designed models to follow the conversion of LUAD to SCLC and found that the barrier to histological transformation converges on tolerance to Myc, which we implicate as a lineage-specific driver of the pulmonary neuroendocrine cell. Histological transformations are frequently accompanied by activation of the Akt pathway. Manipulating this pathway permitted tolerance to Myc as an oncogenic driver, producing rare, stem-like cells that transcriptionally resemble the pulmonary basal lineage. These findings suggest that histological transformation may require the plasticity inherent to the basal stem cell, enabling tolerance to previously incompatible oncogenic driver programs.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma of Lung , Lung Neoplasms , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma , Humans , Adenocarcinoma of Lung/genetics , Adenocarcinoma of Lung/pathology , Adenocarcinoma of Lung/therapy , Epithelial Cells/pathology , Lung/pathology , Lung Neoplasms/genetics , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Lung Neoplasms/therapy , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/genetics , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/pathology , Small Cell Lung Carcinoma/therapy , Oncogenes , Cell Lineage , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt/genetics , Molecular Targeted Therapy
2.
Nat Cancer ; 5(3): 433-447, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38286827

ABSTRACT

Liver metastasis (LM) confers poor survival and therapy resistance across cancer types, but the mechanisms of liver-metastatic organotropism remain unknown. Here, through in vivo CRISPR-Cas9 screens, we found that Pip4k2c loss conferred LM but had no impact on lung metastasis or primary tumor growth. Pip4k2c-deficient cells were hypersensitized to insulin-mediated PI3K/AKT signaling and exploited the insulin-rich liver milieu for organ-specific metastasis. We observed concordant changes in PIP4K2C expression and distinct metabolic changes in 3,511 patient melanomas, including primary tumors, LMs and lung metastases. We found that systemic PI3K inhibition exacerbated LM burden in mice injected with Pip4k2c-deficient cancer cells through host-mediated increase in hepatic insulin levels; however, this circuit could be broken by concurrent administration of an SGLT2 inhibitor or feeding of a ketogenic diet. Thus, this work demonstrates a rare example of metastatic organotropism through co-optation of physiological metabolic cues and proposes therapeutic avenues to counteract these mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Liver Neoplasms , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt , Humans , Mice , Animals , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt/metabolism , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases , Signal Transduction , Insulin , Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor)/metabolism
3.
Nature ; 620(7976): 1080-1088, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37612508

ABSTRACT

Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a driver of cancer metastasis1-4, yet the extent to which this effect depends on the immune system remains unknown. Using ContactTracing-a newly developed, validated and benchmarked tool to infer the nature and conditional dependence of cell-cell interactions from single-cell transcriptomic data-we show that CIN-induced chronic activation of the cGAS-STING pathway promotes downstream signal re-wiring in cancer cells, leading to a pro-metastatic tumour microenvironment. This re-wiring is manifested by type I interferon tachyphylaxis selectively downstream of STING and a corresponding increase in cancer cell-derived endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response. Reversal of CIN, depletion of cancer cell STING or inhibition of ER stress response signalling abrogates CIN-dependent effects on the tumour microenvironment and suppresses metastasis in immune competent, but not severely immune compromised, settings. Treatment with STING inhibitors reduces CIN-driven metastasis in melanoma, breast and colorectal cancers in a manner dependent on tumour cell-intrinsic STING. Finally, we show that CIN and pervasive cGAS activation in micronuclei are associated with ER stress signalling, immune suppression and metastasis in human triple-negative breast cancer, highlighting a viable strategy to identify and therapeutically intervene in tumours spurred by CIN-induced inflammation.


Subject(s)
Chromosomal Instability , Disease Progression , Neoplasms , Humans , Benchmarking , Cell Communication , Colorectal Neoplasms/drug therapy , Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics , Colorectal Neoplasms/immunology , Colorectal Neoplasms/pathology , Melanoma/drug therapy , Melanoma/genetics , Melanoma/immunology , Melanoma/pathology , Tumor Microenvironment , Interferon Type I/immunology , Neoplasm Metastasis , Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress , Signal Transduction , Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy , Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms/genetics , Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms/immunology , Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Neoplasms/genetics , Neoplasms/immunology , Neoplasms/pathology
4.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 5402, 2021 09 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34518527

ABSTRACT

Chromosomal instability (CIN) and epigenetic alterations have been implicated in tumor progression and metastasis; yet how these two hallmarks of cancer are related remains poorly understood. By integrating genetic, epigenetic, and functional analyses at the single cell level, we show that progression of uveal melanoma (UM), the most common intraocular primary cancer in adults, is driven by loss of Polycomb Repressive Complex 1 (PRC1) in a subpopulation of tumor cells. This leads to transcriptional de-repression of PRC1-target genes and mitotic chromosome segregation errors. Ensuing CIN leads to the formation of rupture-prone micronuclei, exposing genomic double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) to the cytosol. This provokes tumor cell-intrinsic inflammatory signaling, mediated by aberrant activation of the cGAS-STING pathway. PRC1 inhibition promotes nuclear enlargement, induces a transcriptional response that is associated with significantly worse patient survival and clinical outcomes, and enhances migration that is rescued upon pharmacologic inhibition of CIN or STING. Thus, deregulation of PRC1 can promote tumor progression by inducing CIN and represents an opportunity for early therapeutic intervention.


Subject(s)
Chromosomal Instability , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Melanoma/genetics , Polycomb Repressive Complex 1/genetics , Uveal Neoplasms/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Chromosome Segregation/genetics , Disease Progression , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Melanoma/metabolism , Melanoma/pathology , Polycomb Repressive Complex 1/metabolism , Prognosis , RNA-Seq/methods , Signal Transduction/genetics , Survival Analysis , Uveal Neoplasms/metabolism , Uveal Neoplasms/pathology
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