4.8 Article

SMAD4 Suppresses WNT-Driven Dedifferentiation and Oncogenesis in the Differentiated Gut Epithelium

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 78, Issue 17, Pages 4878-4890

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-18-0043

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Categories

Funding

  1. NIH, NCI [R01CA190558]
  2. New Jersey Health Foundation [PC46-16]
  3. New Jersey Commission on Cancer Research [DFHS13PPC034]
  4. Aresty Undergraduate Research Program
  5. Department of Life Sciences Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship
  6. MacMillan Cancer Research grants
  7. National Cancer Institute of the National Institute of Health [CA166228]
  8. V Foundation for Cancer Research [V2016-013]
  9. Cancer Institute of New Jersey [P30CA072720]
  10. Initiative for Multidisciplinary Research Teams from Rutgers University, Newark, NJ

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The cell of origin of colon cancer is typically thought to be the resident somatic stem cells, which are immortal and escape the continual cellular turnover characteristic of the intestinal epithelium. However, recent studies have identified certain conditions in which differentiated cells can acquire stem-like properties and give rise to tumors. Defining the origins of tumors will inform cancer prevention efforts as well as cancer therapies, as cancers with distinct origins often respond differently to treatments. We report here a new condition in which tumors arise from the differentiated intestinal epithelium. Inactivation of the differentiation-promoting transcription factor SMAD4 in the intestinal epithelium was surprisingly well tolerated in the short term. However, after several months, adenomas developed with characteristics of activated WNTsignaling. Simultaneous loss ofSMAD4and activation of the WNT pathway led to dedifferentiation and rapid adenoma formation in differentiated tissue. Transcriptional profiling revealed acquisition of stem cell characteristics, and colabeling indicated that cells expressing differentiated enterocyte markers entered the cell cycle and reexpressed stem cell genes upon simultaneous loss of SMAD4 and activation of the WNT pathway. These results indicate that SMAD4 functions to maintain differentiated enterocytes in the presence of oncogenic WNT signaling, thus preventing dedifferentiation and tumor formation in the differentiated intestinal epithelium. Significance: This work identifies a mechanism through which differentiated cells prevent tumor formation by suppressing oncogenic plasticity. (C) 2018AACR.

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