TY - JOUR
T1 - FOXA2 suppresses endometrial carcinogenesis and epithelial-mesenchymal transition by regulating enhancer activity
AU - Sahoo, Subhransu S.
AU - Ramanand, Susmita G.
AU - Gao, Yunpeng
AU - Abbas, Ahmed
AU - Kumar, Ashwani
AU - Cuevas, Ileana C.
AU - Li, Hao Dong
AU - Aguilar, Mitzi
AU - Xing, Chao
AU - Mani, Ram S.
AU - Castrillon, Diego H.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Cheryl Lewis and the UT Southwestern Tissue Resource, a shared resource of the Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, which is supported in part by the National Cancer Institute under award 5P30CA142543. The graphical abstract was created with BioRender.com. This work was supported by NIH grants R01CA272667 and R01CA137181 to DHC and by NIH grant R01CA245294, Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas grant RP190454, and Department of Defense grant W81XWH-21-1-0114 to RSM.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright: © 2022, Sahoo et al.
PY - 2022/6/15
Y1 - 2022/6/15
N2 - FOXA2 encodes a transcription factor mutated in 10% of endometrial cancers (ECs), with a higher mutation rate in aggressive variants. FOXA2 has essential roles in embryonic and uterine development. However, FOXA2’s role in EC is incompletely understood. Functional investigations using human and mouse EC cell lines revealed that FOXA2 controls endometrial epithelial gene expression programs regulating cell proliferation, adhesion, and endometrial-epithelial transition. In live animals, conditional inactivation of Foxa2 or Pten alone in endometrial epithelium did not result in ECs, but simultaneous inactivation of both genes resulted in lethal ECs with complete penetrance, establishing potent synergism between Foxa2 and PI3K signaling. Studies in tumor-derived cell lines and organoids highlighted additional invasion and cell growth phenotypes associated with malignant transformation and identified key mediators, including Myc and Cdh1. Transcriptome and cistrome analyses revealed that FOXA2 broadly controls gene expression programs through modification of enhancer activity in addition to regulating specific target genes, rationalizing its tumor suppressor functions. By integrating results from our cell lines, organoids, animal models, and patient data, our findings demonstrated that FOXA2 is an endometrial tumor suppressor associated with aggressive disease and with shared commonalities among its roles in endometrial function and carcinogenesis.
AB - FOXA2 encodes a transcription factor mutated in 10% of endometrial cancers (ECs), with a higher mutation rate in aggressive variants. FOXA2 has essential roles in embryonic and uterine development. However, FOXA2’s role in EC is incompletely understood. Functional investigations using human and mouse EC cell lines revealed that FOXA2 controls endometrial epithelial gene expression programs regulating cell proliferation, adhesion, and endometrial-epithelial transition. In live animals, conditional inactivation of Foxa2 or Pten alone in endometrial epithelium did not result in ECs, but simultaneous inactivation of both genes resulted in lethal ECs with complete penetrance, establishing potent synergism between Foxa2 and PI3K signaling. Studies in tumor-derived cell lines and organoids highlighted additional invasion and cell growth phenotypes associated with malignant transformation and identified key mediators, including Myc and Cdh1. Transcriptome and cistrome analyses revealed that FOXA2 broadly controls gene expression programs through modification of enhancer activity in addition to regulating specific target genes, rationalizing its tumor suppressor functions. By integrating results from our cell lines, organoids, animal models, and patient data, our findings demonstrated that FOXA2 is an endometrial tumor suppressor associated with aggressive disease and with shared commonalities among its roles in endometrial function and carcinogenesis.
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U2 - 10.1172/JCI157574
DO - 10.1172/JCI157574
M3 - Article
C2 - 35703180
AN - SCOPUS:85132076995
SN - 0021-9738
VL - 132
JO - Journal of Clinical Investigation
JF - Journal of Clinical Investigation
IS - 12
M1 - e157574
ER -