| Literature DB >> 31811277 |
Shuaishuai Teng1, Yang Eric Li2,3, Zhi John Lu4, Dong Wang5,6,7, Ming Yang1, Rui Qi1, Yiming Huang2, Qianyu Wang1, Yanmei Zhang8, Shanwen Chen9, Shasha Li1, Kequan Lin2, Yang Cao1, Qunsheng Ji10, Qingyang Gu10, Yujing Cheng2, Zai Chang2, Wei Guo11, Pengyuan Wang9, Ivan Garcia-Bassets12.
Abstract
Metastasis, the development of secondary malignant growths at a distance from a primary tumor, is the cause of death for 90% of cancer patients, but little is known about how metastatic cancer cells adapt to and colonize new tissue environments. Here, using clinical samples, patient-derived xenograft (PDX) samples, PDX cells, and primary/metastatic cell lines, we discovered that liver metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) cells lose their colon-specific gene transcription program yet gain a liver-specific gene transcription program. We showed that this transcription reprogramming is driven by a reshaped epigenetic landscape of both typical enhancers and super-enhancers. Further, we identified that the liver-specific transcription factors FOXA2 and HNF1A can bind to the gained enhancers and activate the liver-specific gene transcription, thereby driving CRC liver metastasis. Importantly, similar transcription reprogramming can be observed in multiple cancer types. Our data suggest that reprogrammed tissue-specific transcription promotes metastasis and should be targeted therapeutically.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31811277 PMCID: PMC6951341 DOI: 10.1038/s41422-019-0259-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Res ISSN: 1001-0602 Impact factor: 46.297