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Transcriptional activators YAP/TAZ and AXL orchestrate dedifferentiation, cell fate, and metastasis in human osteosarcoma

Authors :
David McCall
Eric R. Molina
Budi Utama
Danh Truong
Rafal Zielinski
Kristi Pence
Antonios G. Mikos
Salah Eddine Lamhamedi-Cherradi
Sandhya Krishnan
Brian A. Menegaz
Richard Gorlick
Joseph A. Ludwig
Dhruva K. Mishra
Sana Mohiuddin
Branko Cuglievan
Amelia M. Vetter
Najat C. Daw
Min P. Kim
Alejandra Ruiz Velasco
John A. Livingston
Source :
Cancer Gene Therapy
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group US, 2021.

Abstract

Osteosarcoma (OS) is a molecularly heterogeneous, aggressive, poorly differentiated pediatric bone cancer that frequently spreads to the lung. Relatively little is known about phenotypic and epigenetic changes that promote lung metastases. To identify key drivers of metastasis, we studied human CCH-OS-D OS cells within a previously described rat acellular lung (ACL) model that preserves the native lung architecture, extracellular matrix, and capillary network. This system identified a subset of cells—termed derived circulating tumor cells (dCTCs)—that can migrate, intravasate, and spread within a bioreactor-perfused capillary network. Remarkably, dCTCs highly expressed epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-associated transcription factors (EMT-TFs), such as ZEB1, TWIST, and SOX9, which suggests that they undergo cellular reprogramming toward a less differentiated state by coopting the same epigenetic machinery used by carcinomas. Since YAP/TAZ and AXL tightly regulate the fate and plasticity of normal mesenchymal cells in response to microenvironmental cues, we explored whether these proteins contributed to OS metastatic potential using an isogenic pair of human OS cell lines that differ in AXL expression. We show that AXL inhibition significantly reduced the number of MG63.2 pulmonary metastases in murine models. Collectively, we present a laboratory-based method to detect and characterize a pure population of dCTCs, which provides a unique opportunity to study how OS cell fate and differentiation contributes to metastatic potential. Though the important step of clinical validation remains, our identification of AXL, ZEB1, and TWIST upregulation raises the tantalizing prospect that EMT-TF-directed therapies might expand the arsenal of therapies used to combat advanced-stage OS.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14765500 and 09291903
Volume :
28
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Gene Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b0f86fbbe967be1d3476d6963ffd1cc