• Biologie

  • Progression et métastases

  • Poumon

Control of Alveolar Differentiation by the Lineage Transcription Factors GATA6 and HOPX Inhibits Lung Adenocarcinoma Metastasis

Menée in vitro et à l'aide de modèles murins, cette étude met en évidence le rôle joué par deux facteurs de transcription, GATA6 et HOPX, dans la régulation du processus métastatique d'un adénocarcinome du poumon

Molecular programs that mediate normal cell differentiation are required for oncogenesis and tumor cell survival in certain cancers. How cell-lineage-restricted genes specifically influence metastasis is poorly defined. In lung cancers, we uncovered a transcriptional program that is preferentially associated with distal airway epithelial differentiation and lung adenocarcinoma (ADC) progression. This program is regulated in part by the lineage transcription factors GATA6 and HOPX. These factors can cooperatively limit the metastatic competence of ADC cells, by modulating overlapping alveolar differentiation and invasogenic target genes. Thus, GATA6 and HOPX are critical nodes in a lineage-selective pathway that directly links effectors of airway epithelial specification to the inhibition of metastasis in the lung ADC subtype. "An alveolar differentiation program controls lung adenocarcinoma progression "This pathway is modulated by the transcription factors GATA6 and HOPX "GATA6 and HOPX cooperate to restrain lung adenocarcinoma metastasis "Suppression of GATA6 and HOPX induces cytokeratins 6A/B and cell invasion

Cancer Cell

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