Title | Progressive plasticity during colorectal cancer metastasis. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2025 |
Authors | Moorman A, Benitez EK, Cambulli F, Jiang Q, Mahmoud A, Lumish M, Hartner S, Balkaran S, Bermeo J, Asawa S, Firat C, Saxena A, Wu F, Luthra A, Burdziak C, Xie Y, Sgambati V, Luckett K, Li Y, Yi Z, Masilionis I, Soares K, Pappou E, Yaeger R, T Kingham P, Jarnagin W, Paty PB, Weiser MR, Mazutis L, D'Angelica M, Shia J, Garcia-Aguilar J, Nawy T, Hollmann TJ, Chaligne R, Sanchez-Vega F, Sharma R, Pe'er D, Ganesh K |
Journal | Nature |
Volume | 637 |
Issue | 8047 |
Pagination | 947-954 |
Date Published | 2025 Jan |
ISSN | 1476-4687 |
Keywords | Animals, Cell Differentiation, Cell Lineage, Cell Plasticity, Cellular Reprogramming, Colorectal Neoplasms, Disease Progression, Female, Homeodomain Proteins, Humans, Intestines, Male, Mice, Neoplasm Metastasis, Neoplastic Stem Cells, Organoids, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled, Tumor Microenvironment, Tumor Suppressor Proteins |
Abstract | As cancers progress, they become increasingly aggressive-metastatic tumours are less responsive to first-line therapies than primary tumours, they acquire resistance to successive therapies and eventually cause death1,2. Mutations are largely conserved between primary and metastatic tumours from the same patients, suggesting that non-genetic phenotypic plasticity has a major role in cancer progression and therapy resistance3-5. However, we lack an understanding of metastatic cell states and the mechanisms by which they transition. Here, in a cohort of biospecimen trios from same-patient normal colon, primary and metastatic colorectal cancer, we show that, although primary tumours largely adopt LGR5+ intestinal stem-like states, metastases display progressive plasticity. Cancer cells lose intestinal cell identities and reprogram into a highly conserved fetal progenitor state before undergoing non-canonical differentiation into divergent squamous and neuroendocrine-like states, a process that is exacerbated in metastasis and by chemotherapy and is associated with poor patient survival. Using matched patient-derived organoids, we demonstrate that metastatic cells exhibit greater cell-autonomous multilineage differentiation potential in response to microenvironment cues compared with their intestinal lineage-restricted primary tumour counterparts. We identify PROX1 as a repressor of non-intestinal lineage in the fetal progenitor state, and show that downregulation of PROX1 licenses non-canonical reprogramming. |
DOI | 10.1038/s41586-024-08150-0 |
Alternate Journal | Nature |
PubMed ID | 39478232 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC11754107 |
Grant List | K08 CA230213 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States U2C CA233284 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States T32 GM007739 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States U54 CA209975 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States R37 CA266185 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States P30 CA008748 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States R01 EB027498 / EB / NIBIB NIH HHS / United States |
Submitted by est4003 on March 6, 2025 - 10:43am