Back to Search Start Over

Comprehensive molecular characterization of lung tumors implicates AKT and MYC signaling in adenocarcinoma to squamous cell transdifferentiation

Authors :
Marina Asher
Jason C. Chang
Yingqian Zhan
Natasha Rekhtman
Hirokazu Taniguchi
Richard Koche
Brian Houck-Loomis
Elisa de Stanchina
Triparna Sen
Charles M. Rudin
Fanli Meng
Irina Linkov
Jacklynn D. Egger
Umesh Bhanot
Nisargbhai S. Shah
Fathema Uddin
Shweta S. Chavan
Michael H.A. Roehrl
Helena A. Yu
Joseph M. Chan
Michael Offin
Viola Allaj
P. Manoj
Katia Ventura
J. Qiu
Jordana Ray-Kirton
Metamia Ciampricotti
Maysun Hasan
Andrew Chow
Álvaro Quintanal-Villalonga
Source :
Journal of Hematology & Oncology, Journal of Hematology & Oncology, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-19 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Background Lineage plasticity, the ability to transdifferentiate among distinct phenotypic identities, facilitates therapeutic resistance in cancer. In lung adenocarcinomas (LUADs), this phenomenon includes small cell and squamous cell (LUSC) histologic transformation in the context of acquired resistance to targeted inhibition of driver mutations. LUAD-to-LUSC transdifferentiation, occurring in up to 9% of EGFR-mutant patients relapsed on osimertinib, is associated with notably poor prognosis. We hypothesized that multi-parameter profiling of the components of mixed histology (LUAD/LUSC) tumors could provide insight into factors licensing lineage plasticity between these histologies. Methods We performed genomic, epigenomics, transcriptomics and protein analyses of microdissected LUAD and LUSC components from mixed histology tumors, pre-/post-transformation tumors and reference non-transformed LUAD and LUSC samples. We validated our findings through genetic manipulation of preclinical models in vitro and in vivo and performed patient-derived xenograft (PDX) treatments to validate potential therapeutic targets in a LUAD PDX model acquiring LUSC features after osimertinib treatment. Results Our data suggest that LUSC transdifferentiation is primarily driven by transcriptional reprogramming rather than mutational events. We observed consistent relative upregulation of PI3K/AKT, MYC and PRC2 pathway genes. Concurrent activation of PI3K/AKT and MYC induced squamous features in EGFR-mutant LUAD preclinical models. Pharmacologic inhibition of EZH1/2 in combination with osimertinib prevented relapse with squamous-features in an EGFR-mutant patient-derived xenograft model, and inhibition of EZH1/2 or PI3K/AKT signaling re-sensitized resistant squamous-like tumors to osimertinib. Conclusions Our findings provide the first comprehensive molecular characterization of LUSC transdifferentiation, suggesting putative drivers and potential therapeutic targets to constrain or prevent lineage plasticity.

Details

ISSN :
17568722
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Hematology & Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a4d876d07f61c183b48e67aebf4b07e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13045-021-01186-z