LKB1 inactivation modulates chromatin accessibility to drive metastatic progression.
Sarah E PierceJeffrey M GranjaM Ryan CorcesJennifer J BradyMin K TsaiAubrey B PierceRui TangPauline ChuDavid M FeldserHoward Y ChangMichael C BassikWilliam J GreenleafMonte M WinslowPublished in: Nature cell biology (2021)
Metastasis is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths and enables cancer cells to compromise organ function by expanding in secondary sites. Since primary tumours and metastases often share the same constellation of driver mutations, the mechanisms that drive their distinct phenotypes are unclear. Here we show that inactivation of the frequently mutated tumour suppressor gene LKB1 (encoding liver kinase B1) has evolving effects throughout the progression of lung cancer, which leads to the differential epigenetic re-programming of early-stage primary tumours compared with late-stage metastases. By integrating genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 screening with bulk and single-cell multi-omic analyses, we unexpectedly identify LKB1 as a master regulator of chromatin accessibility in lung adenocarcinoma primary tumours. Using an in vivo model of metastatic progression, we further show that loss of LKB1 activates the early endoderm transcription factor SOX17 in metastases and a metastatic-like sub-population of cancer cells within primary tumours. The expression of SOX17 is necessary and sufficient to drive a second wave of epigenetic changes in LKB1-deficient cells that enhances metastatic ability. Overall, our study demonstrates how the downstream effects of an individual driver mutation can change throughout cancer development, with implications for stage-specific therapeutic resistance mechanisms and the gene regulatory underpinnings of metastatic evolution.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small cell lung cancer
- early stage
- gene expression
- genome wide
- crispr cas
- single cell
- dna methylation
- stem cells
- dna damage
- papillary thyroid
- poor prognosis
- oxidative stress
- cell cycle arrest
- genome wide identification
- copy number
- signaling pathway
- induced apoptosis
- lymph node
- high throughput
- tyrosine kinase
- lymph node metastasis
- sentinel lymph node