The role of canonical and non-canonical Hedgehog signaling in tumor progression in a mouse model of small cell lung cancer

被引:0
|
作者
A Szczepny
S Rogers
W S N Jayasekara
K Park
R A McCloy
C R Cochrane
V Ganju
W A Cooper
J Sage
C D Peacock
J E Cain
A Burgess
D N Watkins
机构
[1] Centre for Cancer Research,Department of Microbiology
[2] The Hudson Institute for Medical Research,Department of Medical Oncology
[3] The Kinghorn Cancer Centre,Department of Tissue Pathology and Diagnostic Oncology
[4] Garvan Institute of Medical Research,Departments of Pediatrics and Genetics
[5] St Vincent’s Clinical School,Department of Translational Hematology Oncology Research
[6] UNSW Faculty of Medicine,Department of Thoracic Medicine
[7] Immunology and Cancer Biology,undefined
[8] University of Virginia School of Medicine,undefined
[9] School of Clinical Sciences,undefined
[10] Faculty of Medicine,undefined
[11] Nursing and Health Science,undefined
[12] Monash University,undefined
[13] Monash Health,undefined
[14] Royal Prince Alfred Hospital,undefined
[15] Stanford Cancer Institute,undefined
[16] Stanford University School of Medicine,undefined
[17] Cleveland Clinic,undefined
[18] St Vincent’s Hospital,undefined
来源
Oncogene | 2017年 / 36卷
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摘要
Hedgehog (Hh) signaling regulates cell fate and self-renewal in development and cancer. Canonical Hh signaling is mediated by Hh ligand binding to the receptor Patched (Ptch), which in turn activates Gli-mediated transcription through Smoothened (Smo), the molecular target of the Hh pathway inhibitors used as cancer therapeutics. Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is a common, aggressive malignancy with universally poor prognosis. Although preclinical studies have shown that Hh inhibitors block the self-renewal capacity of SCLC cells, the lack of activating pathway mutations have cast doubt over the significance of these observations. In particular, the existence of autocrine, ligand-dependent Hh signaling in SCLC has been disputed. In a conditional Tp53;Rb1 mutant mouse model of SCLC, we now demonstrate a requirement for the Hh ligand Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) for the progression of SCLC. Conversely, we show that conditional Shh overexpression activates canonical Hh signaling in SCLC cells, and markedly accelerates tumor progression. When compared to mouse SCLC tumors expressing an activating, ligand-independent Smo mutant, tumors overexpressing Shh exhibited marked chromosomal instability and Smoothened-independent upregulation of Cyclin B1, a putative non-canonical arm of the Hh pathway. In turn, we show that overexpression of Cyclin B1 induces chromosomal instability in mouse embryonic fibroblasts lacking both Tp53 and Rb1. These results provide strong support for an autocrine, ligand-dependent model of Hh signaling in SCLC pathogenesis, and reveal a novel role for non-canonical Hh signaling through the induction of chromosomal instability.
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页码:5544 / 5550
页数:6
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