SOX17 enables immune evasion of early colorectal adenomas and cancers.
Norihiro GotoPeter M K WestcottSaori GotoShinya ImadaMartin S TaylorGeorge EngJonathan BravermanVikram DeshpandeTyler JacksJudith AgudoÖmer H YilmazPublished in: Nature (2024)
A hallmark of cancer is the avoidance of immune destruction. This process has been primarily investigated in locally advanced or metastatic cancer 1-3 ; however, much less is known about how pre-malignant or early invasive tumours evade immune detection. Here, to understand this process in early colorectal cancers (CRCs), we investigated how naive colon cancer organoids that were engineered in vitro to harbour Apc-null, Kras G12D and Trp53-null (AKP) mutations adapted to the in vivo native colonic environment. Comprehensive transcriptomic and chromatin analyses revealed that the endoderm-specifying transcription factor SOX17 became strongly upregulated in vivo. Notably, whereas SOX17 loss did not affect AKP organoid propagation in vitro, its loss markedly reduced the ability of AKP tumours to persist in vivo. The small fraction of SOX17-null tumours that grew displayed notable interferon-γ (IFNγ)-producing effector-like CD8 + T cell infiltrates in contrast to the immune-suppressive microenvironment in wild-type counterparts. Mechanistically, in both endogenous Apc-null pre-malignant adenomas and transplanted organoid-derived AKP CRCs, SOX17 suppresses the ability of tumour cells to sense and respond to IFNγ, preventing anti-tumour T cell responses. Finally, SOX17 engages a fetal intestinal programme that drives differentiation away from LGR5 + tumour cells to produce immune-evasive LGR5 - tumour cells with lower expression of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I). We propose that SOX17 is a transcription factor that is engaged during the early steps of colon cancer to orchestrate an immune-evasive programme that permits CRC initiation and progression.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- induced apoptosis
- stem cells
- dna binding
- cell cycle arrest
- dendritic cells
- wild type
- small cell lung cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- papillary thyroid
- locally advanced
- immune response
- magnetic resonance
- gene expression
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- study protocol
- oxidative stress
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- randomized controlled trial
- cell death
- long non coding rna
- lymph node
- clinical trial
- quantum dots
- dna damage
- mass spectrometry
- young adults
- lymph node metastasis
- single molecule
- atomic force microscopy