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Self-renewal and differentiation in squamous cell carcinomas

Sastre-Perona, Ana; Hoang-Phou, Steven; Schober, Markus
PMID: 31627191
ISSN: 1945-4589
CID: 4140782

KLF4 as a rheostat of osteolysis and osteogenesis in prostate tumors in the bone

Tassone, Evelyne; Bradaschia-Correa, Vivian; Xiong, Xiaozhong; Sastre-Perona, Ana; Josephson, Anne Marie; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Melamed, Jonathan; Bu, Lei; Kahler, David J; Ossowski, Liliana; Leucht, Philipp; Schober, Markus; Wilson, Elaine L
We previously showed that KLF4, a gene highly expressed in murine prostate stem cells, blocks the progression of indolent intraepithelial prostatic lesions into aggressive and rapidly growing tumors. Here, we show that the anti-tumorigenic effect of KLF4 extends to PC3 human prostate cancer cells growing in the bone. We compared KLF4 null cells with cells transduced with a DOX-inducible KLF4 expression system, and find KLF4 function inhibits PC3 growth in monolayer and soft agar cultures. Furthermore, KLF4 null cells proliferate rapidly, forming large, invasive, and osteolytic tumors when injected into mouse femurs, whereas KLF4 re-expression immediately after their intra-femoral inoculation blocks tumor development and preserves a normal bone architecture. KLF4 re-expression in established KLF4 null bone tumors inhibits their osteolytic effects, preventing bone fractures and inducing an osteogenic response with new bone formation. In addition to these profound biological changes, KLF4 also induces a transcriptional shift from an osteolytic program in KLF4 null cells to an osteogenic program. Importantly, bioinformatic analysis shows that genes regulated by KLF4 overlap significantly with those expressed in metastatic prostate cancer patients and in three individual cohorts with bone metastases, strengthening the clinical relevance of the findings in our xenograft model.
PMID: 31239516
ISSN: 1476-5594
CID: 3953842

De Novo PITX1 Expression Controls Bi-Stable Transcriptional Circuits to Govern Self-Renewal and Differentiation in Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Sastre-Perona, Ana; Hoang-Phou, Steven; Leitner, Marie-Christin; Okuniewska, Martyna; Meehan, Shane; Schober, Markus
Basal tumor propagating cells (TPCs) control squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) growth by self-renewing and differentiating into supra-basal SCC cells, which lack proliferative potential. While transcription factors such as SOX2 and KLF4 can drive these behaviors, their molecular roles and regulatory interactions with each other have remained elusive. Here, we show that PITX1 is specifically expressed in TPCs, where it co-localizes with SOX2 and TRP63 and determines cell fate in mouse and human SCC. Combining gene targeting with chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) and transcriptomic analyses reveals that PITX1 cooperates with SOX2 and TRP63 to sustain an SCC-specific transcriptional feed-forward circuit that maintains TPC-renewal, while inhibiting KLF4 expression and preventing KLF4-dependent differentiation. Conversely, KLF4 represses PITX1, SOX2, and TRP63 expression to prevent TPC expansion. This bi-stable, multi-input network reveals a molecular framework that explains self-renewal, aberrant differentiation, and SCC growth in mice and humans, providing clues for developing differentiation-inducing therapeutic strategies.
PMID: 30713093
ISSN: 1875-9777
CID: 3631872

KLF4, A Gene Regulating Prostate Stem Cell Homeostasis, Is a Barrier to Malignant Progression and Predictor of Good Prognosis in Prostate Cancer

Xiong, Xiaozhong; Schober, Markus; Tassone, Evelyne; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Sastre-Perona, Ana; Zhou, Hua; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Shen, Steven; Chang, Miao; Melamed, Jonathan; Ossowski, Liliana; Wilson, Elaine L
There is a considerable need to identify those individuals with prostate cancer who have indolent disease. We propose that genes that control adult stem cell homeostasis in organs with slow turnover, such as the prostate, control cancer fate. One such gene, KLF4, overexpressed in murine prostate stem cells, regulates their homeostasis, blocks malignant transformation, and controls the self-renewal of tumor-initiating cells. KLF4 loss induces the molecular features of aggressive cancer and converts PIN lesions to invasive sarcomatoid carcinomas; its re-expression in vivo reverses this process. Bioinformatic analysis links these changes to human cancer. KLF4 and its downstream targets make up a gene signature that identifies indolent tumors and predicts recurrence-free survival. This approach may improve prognosis and identify therapeutic targets for advanced cancer.
PMID: 30540935
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 3543262

Cellular quiescence: How TGFβ protects cancer cells from chemotherapy

Brown, Jessie A; Schober, Markus
Using a functional proliferation reporter we identified quiescent tumor propagating cancer cells (TPCs) in intact squamous cell carcinomas, and found that TGFβ signaling controls their reversible entry into a growth arrested state, which protects TPCs from chemotherapy. TPCs with compromised TGFβ/Smad signaling can't enter quiescence and subsequently die from chemotherapy.
PMCID:5821413
PMID: 29487897
ISSN: 2372-3556
CID: 2965532

TGF-beta-Induced Quiescence Mediates Chemoresistance of Tumor-Propagating Cells in Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Brown, Jessie A; Yonekubo, Yoshiya; Hanson, Nicole; Sastre-Perona, Ana; Basin, Alice; Rytlewski, Julie A; Dolgalev, Igor; Meehan, Shane; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Beronja, Slobodan; Schober, Markus
Squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) are heterogeneous tumors sustained by tumor-propagating cancer cells (TPCs). SCCs frequently resist chemotherapy through still unknown mechanisms. Here, we combine H2B-GFP-based pulse-chasing with cell-surface markers to distinguish quiescent from proliferative TPCs within SCCs. We find that quiescent TPCs resist DNA damage and exhibit increased tumorigenic potential in response to chemotherapy, whereas proliferative TPCs undergo apoptosis. Quiescence is regulated by TGF-beta/SMAD signaling, which directly regulates cell-cycle gene transcription to control a reversible G1 cell-cycle arrest, independent of p21CIP function. Indeed, genetic or pharmacological TGF-beta inhibition increases the susceptibility of TPCs to chemotherapy because it prevents entry into a quiescent state. These findings provide direct evidence that TPCs can reversibly enter a quiescent, chemoresistant state and thereby underscore the need for combinatorial approaches to improve treatment of chemotherapy-resistant SCCs.
PMCID:5778452
PMID: 29100014
ISSN: 1875-9777
CID: 2765752

Phosphorylation of Pkp1 by RIPK4 regulates epidermal differentiation and skin tumorigenesis

Lee, Philbert; Jiang, Shangwen; Li, Yuanyuan; Yue, Jiping; Gou, Xuewen; Chen, Shao-Yu; Zhao, Yingming; Schober, Markus; Tan, Minjia; Wu, Xiaoyang
Tissue homeostasis of skin is sustained by epidermal progenitor cells localized within the basal layer of the skin epithelium. Post-translational modification of the proteome, such as protein phosphorylation, plays a fundamental role in the regulation of stemness and differentiation of somatic stem cells. However, it remains unclear how phosphoproteomic changes occur and contribute to epidermal differentiation. In this study, we survey the epidermal cell differentiation in a systematic manner by combining quantitative phosphoproteomics with mammalian kinome cDNA library screen. This approach identified a key signaling event, phosphorylation of a desmosome component, PKP1 (plakophilin-1) by RIPK4 (receptor-interacting serine-threonine kinase 4) during epidermal differentiation. With genome-editing and mouse genetics approach, we show that loss of function of either Pkp1 or Ripk4 impairs skin differentiation and enhances epidermal carcinogenesis in vivo Phosphorylation of PKP1's N-terminal domain by RIPK4 is essential for their role in epidermal differentiation. Taken together, our study presents a global view of phosphoproteomic changes that occur during epidermal differentiation, and identifies RIPK-PKP1 signaling as novel axis involved in skin stratification and tumorigenesis.
PMCID:5494465
PMID: 28507225
ISSN: 1460-2075
CID: 2562782

Joining Forces: Bmi1 Inhibition and Cisplatin Curb Squamous Carcinogenesis

Brown, Jessie A; Schober, Markus
Head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) are refractory to therapeutic interventions. Chen et al. (2017) show that mouse and human HNSCCs and their metastases depend on Bmi1-expressing cancer stem cells and AP1 signaling and that simultaneously inhibiting Bmi1 or AP1, combined with Cisplatin, reduces tumor growth effectively in preclinical models.
PMID: 28475877
ISSN: 1875-9777
CID: 2546932

MED12 Regulates HSC-Specific Enhancers Independently of Mediator Kinase Activity to Control Hematopoiesis

Aranda-Orgilles, Beatriz; Saldana-Meyer, Ricardo; Wang, Eric; Trompouki, Eirini; Fassl, Anne; Lau, Stephanie; Mullenders, Jasper; Rocha, Pedro P; Raviram, Ramya; Guillamot, Maria; Sanchez-Diaz, Maria; Wang, Kun; Kayembe, Clarisse; Zhang, Nan; Amoasii, Leonela; Choudhuri, Avik; Skok, Jane A; Schober, Markus; Reinberg, Danny; Sicinski, Piotr; Schrewe, Heinrich; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Zon, Leonard I; Aifantis, Iannis
Hematopoietic-specific transcription factors require coactivators to communicate with the general transcription machinery and establish transcriptional programs that maintain hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) self-renewal, promote differentiation, and prevent malignant transformation. Mediator is a large coactivator complex that bridges enhancer-localized transcription factors with promoters, but little is known about Mediator function in adult stem cell self-renewal and differentiation. We show that MED12, a member of the Mediator kinase module, is an essential regulator of HSC homeostasis, as in vivo deletion of Med12 causes rapid bone marrow aplasia leading to acute lethality. Deleting other members of the Mediator kinase module does not affect HSC function, suggesting kinase-independent roles of MED12. MED12 deletion destabilizes P300 binding at lineage-specific enhancers, resulting in H3K27Ac depletion, enhancer de-activation, and consequent loss of HSC stemness signatures. As MED12 mutations have been described recently in blood malignancies, alterations in MED12-dependent enhancer regulation may control both physiological and malignant hematopoiesis.
PMCID:5268820
PMID: 27570068
ISSN: 1875-9777
CID: 2232392

Selective Lentiviral Gene Delivery to CD133-Expressing Human Glioblastoma Stem Cells

Bayin, N Sumru; Modrek, Aram S; Dietrich, August; Lebowitz, Jonathan; Abel, Tobias; Song, Hae-Ri; Schober, Markus; Zagzag, David; Buchholz, Christian J; Chao, Moses V; Placantonakis, Dimitris G
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a deadly primary brain malignancy. Glioblastoma stem cells (GSC), which have the ability to self-renew and differentiate into tumor lineages, are believed to cause tumor recurrence due to their resistance to current therapies. A subset of GSCs is marked by cell surface expression of CD133, a glycosylated pentaspan transmembrane protein. The study of CD133-expressing GSCs has been limited by the relative paucity of genetic tools that specifically target them. Here, we present CD133-LV, a lentiviral vector presenting a single chain antibody against CD133 on its envelope, as a vehicle for the selective transduction of CD133-expressing GSCs. We show that CD133-LV selectively transduces CD133+ human GSCs in dose-dependent manner and that transduced cells maintain their stem-like properties. The transduction efficiency of CD133-LV is reduced by an antibody that recognizes the same epitope on CD133 as the viral envelope and by shRNA-mediated knockdown of CD133. Conversely, the rate of transduction by CD133-LV is augmented by overexpression of CD133 in primary human GBM cultures. CD133-LV selectively transduces CD133-expressing cells in intracranial human GBM xenografts in NOD.SCID mice, but spares normal mouse brain tissue, neurons derived from human embryonic stem cells and primary human astrocytes. Our findings indicate that CD133-LV represents a novel tool for the selective genetic manipulation of CD133-expressing GSCs, and can be used to answer important questions about how these cells contribute to tumor biology and therapy resistance.
PMCID:4277468
PMID: 25541984
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 1419672