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OCA-T1 and OCA-T2 are coactivators of POU2F3 in the tuft cell lineage

Authors :
Xiaoli S. Wu
Xue-Yan He
Jonathan J. Ipsaro
Yu-Han Huang
Jonathan B. Preall
David Ng
Yan Ting Shue
Julien Sage
Mikala Egeblad
Leemor Joshua-Tor
Christopher R. Vakoc
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Tuft cells are a rare chemosensory lineage that coordinates immune and neural responses to foreign pathogens in mucosal tissues(1). Recent studies have also revealed tuft-cell-like human tumours(2,3), particularly as a variant of small-cell lung cancer. Both normal and neoplastic tuft cells share a genetic requirement for the transcription factor POU2F3 (refs. (2,4)), although the transcriptional mechanisms that generate this cell type are poorly understood. Here we show that binding of POU2F3 to the uncharacterized proteins C11orf53 and COLCA2 (renamed here OCA-T1/POU2AF2 and OCA-T2/POU2AF3, respectively) is critical in the tuft cell lineage. OCA-T1 and OCA-T2 are paralogues of the B-cell-specific coactivator OCA-B; all three proteins are encoded in a gene cluster and contain a conserved peptide that binds to class II POU transcription factors and a DNA octamer motif in a bivalent manner. We demonstrate that binding between POU2F3 and OCA-T1 or OCA-T2 is essential in tuft-cell-like small-cell lung cancer. Moreover, we generated OCA-T1-deficient mice, which are viable but lack tuft cells in several mucosal tissues. These findings reveal that the POU2F3–OCA-T complex is the master regulator of tuft cell identity and a molecular vulnerability of tuft-cell-like small-cell lung cancer.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
607
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....28d9bfcaa206367ae9a67e4c6f2f3200
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04842-7