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Wnt/β-catenin signaling accelerates mouse lung tumorigenesis by imposing an embryonic distal progenitor phenotype on lung epithelium
Eugenia C. Pacheco-Pinedo, … , Francesco J. DeMayo, Edward E. Morrisey
Eugenia C. Pacheco-Pinedo, … , Francesco J. DeMayo, Edward E. Morrisey
Published April 1, 2011
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2011;121(5):1935-1945. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI44871.
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Research Article Pulmonology

Wnt/β-catenin signaling accelerates mouse lung tumorigenesis by imposing an embryonic distal progenitor phenotype on lung epithelium

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Abstract

Although mutations in Kras are present in 21% of lung tumors, there is a high level of heterogeneity in phenotype and outcome among patients with lung cancer bearing similar mutations, suggesting that other pathways are important. Wnt/β-catenin signaling is a known oncogenic pathway that plays a well-defined role in colon and skin cancer; however, its role in lung cancer is unclear. We have shown here that activation of Wnt/β-catenin in the bronchiolar epithelium of the adult mouse lung does not itself promote tumor development. However, concurrent activation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling and expression of a constitutively active Kras mutant (KrasG12D) led to a dramatic increase in both overall tumor number and size compared with KrasG12D alone. Activation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling altered the KrasG12D tumor phenotype, resulting in a phenotypic switch from bronchiolar epithelium to the highly proliferative distal progenitors found in the embryonic lung. This was associated with decreased E-cadherin expression at the cell surface, which may underlie the increased metastasis of tumors with active Wnt/β-catenin signaling. Together, these data suggest that activation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling can combine with other oncogenic pathways in lung epithelium to produce a more aggressive tumor phenotype by imposing an embryonic distal progenitor phenotype and by decreasing E-cadherin expression.

Authors

Eugenia C. Pacheco-Pinedo, Amy C. Durham, Kathleen M. Stewart, Ashley M. Goss, Min Min Lu, Francesco J. DeMayo, Edward E. Morrisey

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Figure 5

Sox9 expression in human lung adenocarcinomas.

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Sox9 expression in human lung adenocarcinomas.
The human lung tumor arra...
The human lung tumor array was immunostained for Sox9 and axin2 expression as described in Methods and scored by 3 independent researchers. Normal human lung contains only rare Sox9-positive cells (A) and almost no axin2-immunostaining cells (C). (B, D, and E) 62% of adenocarcinoma samples had high levels of Sox9, while 42% of adenocarcinoma samples were positive for axin2 immunoreactivity. The percentage of Sox9-positive samples that were axin2 positive was 52% (E). The samples used for Sox9 and Axin2 immunostaining were from the same normal lung and tumor samples. (F) LiCl and Wnt3a induce SOX9 and ID2 expression in A549 and H441 cells but not H552 and H1299 cells. Untreated cells served as controls in these assays. Original magnification, ×100.

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