4.7 Article

NOTCH, ASCL1, p53 and RB alterations define an alternative pathway driving neuroendocrine and small cell lung carcinomas

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 138, Issue 4, Pages 927-938

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.29835

Keywords

Lung cancer; small cell lung cancer; achaete-scute homolog 1; neurogenic locus notch homolog; retinoblastoma protein

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 832]
  2. German Cancer Aid (Collaborative NE Lung Cancer Research Initiative)
  3. Federal NRW Ministry of Research
  4. Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne (CMMC)
  5. Comprehensive Cancer Center CIO Koln Bonn (German Cancer Aid)
  6. State NRW Ministry of Research

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Small cell lung cancers (SCLCs) and extrapulmonary small cell cancers (SCCs) are very aggressive tumors arising de novo as primary small cell cancer with characteristic genetic lesions in RB1 and TP53. Based on murine models, neuroendocrine stem cells of the terminal bronchioli have been postulated as the cellular origin of primary SCLC. However, both in lung and many other organs, combined small cell/non-small cell tumors and secondary transitions from non-small cell carcinomas upon cancer therapy to neuroendocrine and small cell tumors occur. We define features of small cell-ness based on neuroendocrine markers, characteristic RB1 and TP53 mutations and small cell morphology. Furthermore, here we identify a pathway driving the pathogenesis of secondary SCLC involving inactivating NOTCH mutations, activation of the NOTCH target ASCL1 and canonical WNT-signaling in the context of mutual bi-allelic RB1 and TP53 lesions. Additionaly, we explored ASCL1 dependent RB inactivation by phosphorylation, which is reversible by CDK5 inhibition. We experimentally verify the NOTCH-ASCL1-RB-p53 signaling axis in vitro and validate its activation by genetic alterations in vivo. We analyzed clinical tumor samples including SCLC, SCC and pulmonary large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas and adenocarcinomas using amplicon-based Next Generation Sequencing, immunohistochemistry and fluorescence in situ hybridization. In conclusion, we identified a novel pathway underlying rare secondary SCLC which may drive small cell carcinomas in organs other than lung, as well.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available