作者
Huijing Yin,Bo Jing,Dongliang Xu,Wenzheng Guo,Beibei Sun,Jie Zhang,Yueling Liao,Hongyong Song,Tong Wang,Shuli Liu,Yueling Liao,Min Hu,Kaimi Li,Siwei Zhang,Hongjia Zhang,Jianhua Xu,Xue Li,Jing Du,Yadi Wu,Ying Li Wu,Qi Wang,Feng Yao,Yueh Eugene Chin,Binhua P Zhou,Jiong Deng
摘要
While initiation is established as a critical step in tumorigenesis, the identity of the cell of origin for lung adenocarcinoma and the mechanism controlling susceptibility to initiation remain elusive. Here we show that lung tumor suppressor Gprc5a-knockout (KO) mice are susceptible to initiation of lung tumorigenesis. Bronchioalveolar stem cells (BASC) and alveolar type 2 (AT2) cells were aberrantly expanded in Gprc5a-KO mouse lungs compared with those in wild-type (WT) mice, suggesting that Gprc5a-KO might confer susceptibility to initiation by increasing the cell of origin in mouse lungs. BASCs from Gprc5a-KO mice (KO-BASC) exhibited significantly increased stemness and self-renewal potential and reduced differentiation capacity compared with BASCs from WT mice (WT-BASC). AT2 cells did not possess self-renewal potential regardless of Gprc5a status. KO-BASCs expressed a stem-like gene profile with upregulated Abcg2, EGFR, and NF-κB signaling compared with WT-BASCs. Blockade of EGFR and NF-κB signaling inhibited both expansion of BASC and AT2 cells and lung tumorigenesis. Abcg2 was expressed in active KO-BASCs as well as in lung tumor cells but not in quiescent WT-BASCs or AT2 cells, supporting that lung adenocarcinoma cells are derived from Abcg2-positive KO-BASCs (active). Taken together, Gprc5a deletion leads to expansion of active BASCs via dysregulated EGFR and NF-κB signaling that confers susceptibility to initiation of lung tumorigenesis, marking Abcg2-positive BASCs as candidate cell of origin for lung adenocarcinoma.Identification of active bronchioalveolar stem cells as lung adenocarcinoma cells of origin provides insights into mechanisms of lung tumorigenesis and could facilitate development of effective strategies for cancer prevention and therapy. See related commentary by Osborne and Minna, p. 972.