JHEP Reports (May 2023)

Antagonism between wild-type and mutant β-catenin controls hepatoblastoma differentiation via fascin-1

  • Caroline Gest,
  • Sandra Sena,
  • Lydia Dif,
  • Véronique Neaud,
  • Robin Loesch,
  • Nathalie Dugot-Senant,
  • Lisa Paysan,
  • Léo Piquet,
  • Terezinha Robbe,
  • Nathalie Allain,
  • Doulaye Dembele,
  • Catherine Guettier,
  • Paulette Bioulac-Sage,
  • Anne Rullier,
  • Brigitte Le Bail,
  • Christophe F. Grosset,
  • Frédéric Saltel,
  • Valérie Lagrée,
  • Sabine Colnot,
  • Violaine Moreau

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
p. 100691

Abstract

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Background & Aims: β-catenin is a well-known effector of the Wnt pathway, and a key player in cadherin-mediated cell adhesion. Oncogenic mutations of β-catenin are very frequent in paediatric liver primary tumours. Those mutations are mostly heterozygous, which allows the co-expression of wild-type (WT) and mutated β-catenins in tumour cells. We investigated the interplay between WT and mutated β-catenins in liver tumour cells, and searched for new actors of the β-catenin pathway. Methods: Using an RNAi strategy in β-catenin-mutated hepatoblastoma (HB) cells, we dissociated the structural and transcriptional activities of β-catenin, which are carried mainly by WT and mutated proteins, respectively. Their impact was characterised using transcriptomic and functional analyses. We studied mice that develop liver tumours upon activation of β-catenin in hepatocytes (APCKO and β-cateninΔexon3 mice). We used transcriptomic data from mouse and human HB specimens, and used immunohistochemistry to analyse samples. Results: We highlighted an antagonistic role of WT and mutated β-catenins with regard to hepatocyte differentiation, as attested by alterations in the expression of hepatocyte markers and the formation of bile canaliculi. We characterised fascin-1 as a transcriptional target of mutated β-catenin involved in tumour cell differentiation. Using mouse models, we found that fascin-1 is highly expressed in undifferentiated tumours. Finally, we found that fascin-1 is a specific marker of primitive cells including embryonal and blastemal cells in human HBs. Conclusions: Fascin-1 expression is linked to a loss of differentiation and polarity of hepatocytes. We present fascin-1 as a previously unrecognised factor in the modulation of hepatocyte differentiation associated with β-catenin pathway alteration in the liver, and as a new potential target in HB. Impact and implications: The FSCN1 gene, encoding fascin-1, was reported to be a metastasis-related gene in various cancers. Herein, we uncover its expression in poor-prognosis hepatoblastomas, a paediatric liver cancer. We show that fascin-1 expression is driven by the mutated beta-catenin in liver tumour cells. We provide new insights on the impact of fascin-1 expression on tumour cell differentiation. We highlight fascin-1 as a marker of immature cells in mouse and human hepatoblastomas.

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