TY - JOUR
T1 - Humanized neurofibroma model from induced pluripotent stem cells delineates tumor pathogenesis and developmental origins
AU - Mo, Juan
AU - Anastasaki, Corina
AU - Chen, Zhiguo
AU - Shipman, Tracey
AU - Papke, Jason
AU - Yin, Kevin
AU - Gutmann, David H.
AU - Le, Lu Q.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the members of the Le and Gutmann laboratories for helpful discussions, Yong Wang for technical assistance, and Renee McKay for reviewing and editing the manuscript. JM is the recipient of the Early Investigator Research Award from the US Department of Defense (W81XWH1910687). CA is funded by a National Cancer Institute (NCI) Research Specialist Award (R50CA233164). LQL holds the Thomas L. Shields, MD Professorship in Dermatology and is supported by the NF1 Research Consortium Fund and the Neurofibromatosis Therapeutic Acceleration Program. DHG holds the Donald O. Schnuck Family Professorship in Neurology. This work was supported by funding from the Giorgio Foundation (to LQL and DHG), the NCI (R01 CA166593 and U54 CA 196519, to LQL), and the NIH (R35 NS097211, to DHG).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, American Society for Clinical Investigation.
PY - 2021/1/4
Y1 - 2021/1/4
N2 - Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a common tumor predisposition syndrome caused by NF1 gene mutation, in which affected patients develop Schwann cell lineage peripheral nerve sheath tumors (neurofibromas). To investigate human neurofibroma pathogenesis, we differentiated a series of isogenic, patient-specific NF1-mutant human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) into Schwannian lineage cells (SLCs). We found that, although WT and heterozygous NF1-mutant hiPSCs-SLCs did not form tumors following mouse sciatic nerve implantation, NF1-null SLCs formed bona fide neurofibromas with high levels of SOX10 expression. To confirm that SOX10+ SLCs contained the cells of origin for neurofibromas, both Nf1 alleles were inactivated in mouse Sox10+ cells, leading to classic nodular cutaneous and plexiform neurofibroma formation that completely recapitulated their human counterparts. Moreover, we discovered that NF1 loss impaired Schwann cell differentiation by inducing a persistent stem-like state to expand the pool of progenitors required to initiate tumor formation, indicating that, in addition to regulating MAPK-mediated cell growth, NF1 loss also altered Schwann cell differentiation to promote neurofibroma development. Taken together, we established a complementary humanized neurofibroma explant and, to our knowledge, first-in-kind genetically engineered nodular cutaneous neurofibroma mouse models that delineate neurofibroma pathogenesis amenable to future therapeutic target discovery and evaluation.
AB - Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a common tumor predisposition syndrome caused by NF1 gene mutation, in which affected patients develop Schwann cell lineage peripheral nerve sheath tumors (neurofibromas). To investigate human neurofibroma pathogenesis, we differentiated a series of isogenic, patient-specific NF1-mutant human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) into Schwannian lineage cells (SLCs). We found that, although WT and heterozygous NF1-mutant hiPSCs-SLCs did not form tumors following mouse sciatic nerve implantation, NF1-null SLCs formed bona fide neurofibromas with high levels of SOX10 expression. To confirm that SOX10+ SLCs contained the cells of origin for neurofibromas, both Nf1 alleles were inactivated in mouse Sox10+ cells, leading to classic nodular cutaneous and plexiform neurofibroma formation that completely recapitulated their human counterparts. Moreover, we discovered that NF1 loss impaired Schwann cell differentiation by inducing a persistent stem-like state to expand the pool of progenitors required to initiate tumor formation, indicating that, in addition to regulating MAPK-mediated cell growth, NF1 loss also altered Schwann cell differentiation to promote neurofibroma development. Taken together, we established a complementary humanized neurofibroma explant and, to our knowledge, first-in-kind genetically engineered nodular cutaneous neurofibroma mouse models that delineate neurofibroma pathogenesis amenable to future therapeutic target discovery and evaluation.
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U2 - 10.1172/JCI139807
DO - 10.1172/JCI139807
M3 - Article
C2 - 33108355
AN - SCOPUS:85098864659
SN - 0021-9738
VL - 131
JO - Journal of Clinical Investigation
JF - Journal of Clinical Investigation
IS - 1
M1 - e139807
ER -