| Literature DB >> 35406531 |
Laetitia Seguin1, Manon Durandy1, Chloe C Feral1.
Abstract
Lung adenocarcinoma, the major form of lung cancer, is the deadliest cancer worldwide, due to its late diagnosis and its high heterogeneity. Indeed, lung adenocarcinoma exhibits pronounced inter- and intra-tumor heterogeneity cofounding precision medicine. Tumor heterogeneity is a clinical challenge driving tumor progression and drug resistance. Several key pieces of evidence demonstrated that lung adenocarcinoma results from the transformation of progenitor cells that accumulate genetic abnormalities. Thus, a better understanding of the cell of origin of lung adenocarcinoma represents an opportunity to unveil new therapeutic alternatives and stratify patient tumors. While the lung is remarkably quiescent during homeostasis, it presents an extensive ability to respond to injury and regenerate lost or damaged cells. As the lung is constantly exposed to potential insult, its regenerative potential is assured by several stem and progenitor cells. These can be induced to proliferate in response to injury as well as differentiate into multiple cell types. A better understanding of how genetic alterations and perturbed microenvironments impact progenitor-mediated tumorigenesis and treatment response is of the utmost importance to develop new therapeutic opportunities.Entities:
Keywords: LUAD; cell of origin; immune infiltration; lung progenitor; oncogenic driver
Year: 2022 PMID: 35406531 PMCID: PMC8996976 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14071759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Schematic anatomy of the lung and cellular composition of the airway epithelium (created with BioRender.com, accessed on 15 February 2022).
Figure 2Multiple progenitors are involved in the lung epithelium repair mechanism (Created with BioRender.com, accessed on 15 February 2022). AEP: Alveolar Epithelial Progenitor, AT1: Alveolar Type 1, AT2: Alveolar Type 2, β4: Integrin Beta 4, DATPS: Damage-Associated Transient Progenitors, IL-1β: Interleukin 1 Beta, Krt5: Keratin 5, Krt8: Keratin 8, LNEP: Lineage-Negative Epithelial stem/Progenitor, PATS: Pre-Alveolar type-1 Transitional cell state, TSP1: Thrombospondin-1.
Summary of LUAD mouse model to distinct cells of origin.
| Genetics | Inducer | Target Cells | Inflammation | Tumor Type/Location | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Ad5–Cre | lung epithelial cells | Yes | LUAD/papillary | Kim et al. [ |
|
| Tam | SPC+ cells (BASC and AT2) | No | LUAD in alveolar space | Xu et al. [ |
|
| Tam | CC10+ cells (BASC and Club) | No | Hyperplasia in the BADJ | Xu et al. [ |
|
| Tam | lung epithelial cells | No | LUAD in alveolar space | Mainardi et al. [ |
|
| Sca1 expression | Sca1+ cells | no | CC10+ tumors in the bronchiole/BADJ/aleoli | Mainardi et al. [ |
|
| urethane | lung epithelial cells | yes | LUAD in alveolar space and in the airway | Spella et al. [ |
| urethane | lung epithelial cells | yes | LUAD in alveolar space and in the airway | Spella et al. [ | |
|
| Ad5–SPC–Cre | SPC+ cells (BASC and AT2) | yes | LUAD in alveolar space | Sutherland et al. [ |
|
| Ad5–CC10–Cre | CC10+ cells (BASC and Club) | yes | LUAD in alveolar space and BADJ | Sutherland et al. [ |
|
| Ad5–Cre | lung epithelial cells | yes | LUAD in alveolar space and BADJ | Yin et al. [ |
|
| Ad5–Cre | lung epithelial cells | yes | LUAD in alveolar space | Yin et al. [ |
|
| Ad5–SPC–Cre | SPC+ cells (BASC and AT2) | yes | LUAD in alveolar space | Nagaraj et al. [ |
|
| Ad5–CC10–Cre | CC10+ cells (BASC and Club) | yes | lung adenosquamous and LUSC | Nagaraj et al. [ |
|
| Ad5–SPC–Cre | SPC+ cells (BASC and AT2) | yes | LUAD in alveolar space | Best et al. [ |
|
| Ad5–CC10–Cre | CC10+ cells (BASC and Club) | yes | LUSC in the airway | Best et al. [ |
Figure 3Cell of origin determines the immune microenvironment (created with BioRender.com, accessed on 15 February 2022).