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NOTUM from Apc-mutant cells biases clonal competition to initiate cancer

Authors :
Pirjo Nummela
Colin Nixon
William C. Clark
Ella Gilchrist
Simon J. Leedham
Michael C. Hodder
Nalle Pentinmikko
Arafath Kaja Najumudeen
Nathalie Sphyris
E. Yvonne Jones
Jean-Paul Vincent
Hans Clevers
Nicky J. Willis
Alexander Raven
Kristina Kirschner
Dustin J. Flanagan
Paul V. Fish
Emma Minnee
Pekka Katajisto
Ville Hietakangas
Owen J. Sansom
Christine Perret
Lynn McGarry
Nadia Nasreddin
Rachel A. Ridgway
Ann C. Williams
Kathryn Gilroy
Kalle Luopajärvi
Sandra Scharaw
Béatrice Romagnolo
Marianne Lähde
Ari Ristimäki
Johanna Englund
Anna Taylor Webb
Kari Alitalo
Ann Hedley
Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research
Institute of Biotechnology (-2009)
University of Helsinki
CAN-PRO - Translational Cancer Medicine Program
Centre of Excellence in Stem Cell Metabolism
Helsinki Institute of Life Science HiLIFE
Institute of Biotechnology
Juha Klefström / Principal Investigator
Research Programs Unit
Department of Pathology
Doctoral Programme in Biomedicine
ATG - Applied Tumor Genomics
Doctoral Programme in Integrative Life Science
HUSLAB
Kari Alitalo / Principal Investigator
Molecular and Integrative Biosciences Research Programme
Biosciences
Nutrient sensing laboratory
Source :
Nature, 594(7863), 430-435. Nature Publishing Group, Flanagan, D J, Williams, A C, Katajisto, P K, Sampson, O J & al., E 2021, ' NOTUM from Apc-mutant cells biases clonal competition to initiate cancer ', Nature, vol. 594, pp. 430–435 (2021) . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03525-z
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Funding Information: Acknowledgements We thank the Core Services and Advanced Technologies at the Cancer Research UK Beatson Institute (C596/A17196 and A31287), and particularly the Biological Services Unit, Histology Service and Molecular Technologies; members of the Sansom and Katajisto laboratories for discussions of the data and manuscript; and BRC Oxford for supplying patient material. O.J.S. and his laboratory members were supported by Cancer Research UK (A28223, A21139, A12481 and A17196). D.J.F. and M.C.H. were supported by the UK Medical Research Council (MR/R017247/1 and MR/J50032X/1, respectively). SpecifiCancer CRUK Grand Challenge (C7932/A29055) is funded by Cancer Research UK and the Mark Foundation for Cancer Research. P.K. and his laboratory members were supported by the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence MetaStem (266869, 304591 and 320185), the ERC Starting Grant 677809, the Swedish Research Council 2018-03078, the Cancerfonden 190634, the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation and the Cancer Foundation Finland. N.P. was supported by the Finnish Cultural Foundation, the Biomedicum Helsinki Foundation, the Orion Research Foundation sr and The Paulo Foundation. P.V.F. was supported by Alzheimer’s Research UK and The Francis Crick Institute. The ARUK UCL Drug Discovery Institute receives its core funding from Alzheimer’s Research UK (520909). The Francis Crick Institute receives its core funding from Cancer Research UK (FC001002), the UK Medical Research Council (FC001002) and the Wellcome Trust (FC001002). Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. The tumour suppressor APC is the most commonly mutated gene in colorectal cancer. Loss of Apc in intestinal stem cells drives the formation of adenomas in mice via increased WNT signalling(1), but reduced secretion of WNT ligands increases the ability of Apc-mutant intestinal stem cells to colonize a crypt (known as fixation)(2). Here we investigated how Apc-mutant cells gain a clonal advantage over wild-type counterparts to achieve fixation. We found that Apc-mutant cells are enriched for transcripts that encode several secreted WNT antagonists, with Notum being the most highly expressed. Conditioned medium from Apc-mutant cells suppressed the growth of wild-type organoids in a NOTUM-dependent manner. Furthermore, NOTUM-secreting Apc-mutant clones actively inhibited the proliferation of surrounding wild-type crypt cells and drove their differentiation, thereby outcompeting crypt cells from the niche. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of NOTUM abrogated the ability of Apc-mutant cells to expand and form intestinal adenomas. We identify NOTUM as a key mediator during the early stages of mutation fixation that can be targeted to restore wild-type cell competitiveness and provide preventative strategies for people at a high risk of developing colorectal cancer.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, 594(7863), 430-435. Nature Publishing Group, Flanagan, D J, Williams, A C, Katajisto, P K, Sampson, O J & al., E 2021, ' NOTUM from Apc-mutant cells biases clonal competition to initiate cancer ', Nature, vol. 594, pp. 430–435 (2021) . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03525-z
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d5733edf6d5fc44fd62aea7978eb694e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03525-z