eLife (Nov 2018)

FoxA1 and FoxA2 drive gastric differentiation and suppress squamous identity in NKX2-1-negative lung cancer

  • Soledad A Camolotto,
  • Shrivatsav Pattabiraman,
  • Timothy L Mosbruger,
  • Alex Jones,
  • Veronika K Belova,
  • Grace Orstad,
  • Mitchell Streiff,
  • Lydia Salmond,
  • Chris Stubben,
  • Klaus H Kaestner,
  • Eric L Snyder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.38579
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

Read online

Changes in cancer cell identity can alter malignant potential and therapeutic response. Loss of the pulmonary lineage specifier NKX2-1 augments the growth of KRAS-driven lung adenocarcinoma and causes pulmonary to gastric transdifferentiation. Here, we show that the transcription factors FoxA1 and FoxA2 are required for initiation of mucinous NKX2-1-negative lung adenocarcinomas in the mouse and for activation of their gastric differentiation program. Foxa1/2 deletion severely impairs tumor initiation and causes a proximal shift in cellular identity, yielding tumors expressing markers of the squamocolumnar junction of the gastrointestinal tract. In contrast, we observe downregulation of FoxA1/2 expression in the squamous component of both murine and human lung adenosquamous carcinoma. Using sequential in vivo recombination, we find that FoxA1/2 loss in established KRAS-driven neoplasia originating from SPC-positive alveolar cells induces keratinizing squamous cell carcinomas. Thus, NKX2-1, FoxA1 and FoxA2 coordinately regulate the growth and identity of lung cancer in a context-specific manner.

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