| Literature DB >> 32907838 |
Shilpa Patil1, Benjamin Steuber1, Waltraut Kopp1, Vijayalakshmi Kari2, Laura Urbach1, Xin Wang2, Stefan Küffer3, Hanibal Bohnenberger3, Dimitra Spyropoulou1, Zhe Zhang1, Lennart Versemann1, Mark Sebastian Bösherz3, Marius Brunner1, Jochen Gaedcke2, Philipp Ströbel3, Jin-San Zhang4,5, Albrecht Neesse1, Volker Ellenrieder1, Shiv K Singh1, Steven A Johnsen2,6, Elisabeth Hessmann7.
Abstract
Recent studies have thoroughly described genome-wide expression patterns defining molecular subtypes of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), with different prognostic and predictive implications. Although the reversible nature of key regulatory transcription circuits defining the two extreme PDAC subtype lineages "classical" and "basal-like" suggests that subtype states are not permanently encoded but underlie a certain degree of plasticity, pharmacologically actionable drivers of PDAC subtype identity remain elusive. Here, we characterized the mechanistic and functional implications of the histone methyltransferase enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) in controlling PDAC plasticity, dedifferentiation, and molecular subtype identity. Utilization of transgenic PDAC models and human PDAC samples linked EZH2 activity to PDAC dedifferentiation and tumor progression. Combined RNA- and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing studies identified EZH2 as a pivotal suppressor of differentiation programs in PDAC and revealed EZH2-dependent transcriptional repression of the classical subtype defining transcription factor Gata6 as a mechanistic basis for EZH2-dependent PDAC progression. Importantly, genetic or pharmacologic depletion of EZH2 sufficiently increased GATA6 expression, thus inducing a gene signature shift in favor of a less aggressive and more therapy-susceptible, classical PDAC subtype state. Consistently, abrogation of GATA6 expression in EZH2-deficient PDAC cells counteracted the acquisition of classical gene signatures and rescued their invasive capacities, suggesting that GATA6 derepression is critical to overcome PDAC progression in the context of EZH2 inhibition. Together, our findings link the EZH2-GATA6 axis to PDAC subtype identity and uncover EZH2 inhibition as an appealing strategy to induce subtype-switching in favor of a less aggressive PDAC phenotype. SIGNIFICANCE: This study highlights the role of EZH2 in PDAC progression and molecular subtype identity and suggests EZH2 inhibition as a strategy to recalibrate GATA6 expression in favor of a less aggressive disease. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT: http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/canres/80/21/4620/F1.large.jpg. ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32907838 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-20-0672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701