An EGFR ligand promotes EGFR-mutant but not KRAS-mutant lung cancer in vivo

被引:0
|
作者
Koichi Tomoshige
Minzhe Guo
Tomoshi Tsuchiya
Takuya Fukazawa
Iris M. Fink-Baldauf
William D. Stuart
Yoshio Naomoto
Takeshi Nagayasu
Yutaka Maeda
机构
[1] Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine,Division of Neonatology, Perinatal and Pulmonary Biology, Perinatal Institute
[2] Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences,Department of Surgical Oncology
[3] Kawasaki Medical School,Department of General Surgery
[4] Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences,Departments of Clinical Oncology and Surgical Oncology
来源
Oncogene | 2018年 / 37卷
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摘要
EGFR ligands (e.g., EGF and TGFA) have been shown to be clinically associated with poor survival in lung cancer. Since TGFA itself initiates autochthonous tumors in liver, breast, and pancreas but not in the lung in transgenic mice in vivo, it would appear that an EGFR ligand may not initiate but rather promote lung cancer. However, it has not been proven in vivo whether lung cancer is promoted by an EGFR ligand. Using transgenic mouse models conditionally expressing EGFRL858R or KrasG12D with TGFA (an EGFR ligand) in lung epithelium, we determined that TGFA promoted the growth of EGFRL858R-lung tumors in airway regions but not that of KrasG12D-lung tumors. Analysis of TCGA datasets identified ΔNp63 and AGR2 as potential key tumor-promoting regulators, which were highly induced in the TGFA-induced EGFRL858R-lung tumors. The expression of AGR2 was positively correlated with the expression of TGFA in human EGFR-mutant lung adenocarcinomas. The expression of TGFA in human EGFR-mutant lung adenocarcinomas but not in the EGFR wild-type lung adenocarcinoma was associated with poor survival. These results suggest that targeting EGFR ligands may benefit patients who carry EGFR-mutant lung tumors but will not benefit patients with KRAS-mutant lung tumors.
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页码:3894 / 3908
页数:14
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