AKT-dependent NOTCH3 activation drives tumor progression in a model of mesenchymal colorectal cancer

Júlia Varga(Goethe University Frankfurt), Adele M. Nicolas(Goethe University Frankfurt), Valentina Petrocelli(Goethe University Frankfurt), Marina Pešić(Goethe University Frankfurt), Abdelrahman Mahmoud(German Cancer Research Center), Birgitta E. Michels(German Cancer Research Center), Emre Etlioglu(KU Leuven), Diego Yepes(Goethe University Frankfurt), Björn Häupl(Goethe University Frankfurt), Paul K. Ziegler(Goethe University Frankfurt), Katrin Bankov(Goethe University Frankfurt), Peter J. Wild(Goethe University Frankfurt), S. Wänninger(Technical University of Munich), Hind Medyouf(Goethe University Frankfurt), Henner F. Farin(Goethe University Frankfurt), Sabine Tejpar(KU Leuven), Thomas Oellerich(Goethe University Frankfurt), Jürgen Ruland(German Cancer Research Center), Christian W. Siebel, Florian R. Greten(Goethe University Frankfurt)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
August 4, 2020
Cited by 103Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Recently, a transcriptome-based consensus molecular subtype (CMS) classification of colorectal cancer (CRC) has been established, which may ultimately help to individualize CRC therapy. However, the lack of animal models that faithfully recapitulate the different molecular subtypes impedes adequate preclinical testing of stratified therapeutic concepts. Here, we demonstrate that constitutive AKT activation in intestinal epithelial cells markedly enhances tumor invasion and metastasis in Trp53ΔIEC mice (Trp53ΔIECAktE17K) upon challenge with the carcinogen azoxymethane. Gene-expression profiling indicates that Trp53ΔIECAktE17K tumors resemble the human mesenchymal colorectal cancer subtype (CMS4), which is characterized by the poorest survival rate among the four CMSs. Trp53ΔIECAktE17K tumor cells are characterized by Notch3 up-regulation, and treatment of Trp53ΔIECAktE17K mice with a NOTCH3-inhibiting antibody reduces invasion and metastasis. In CRC patients, NOTCH3 expression correlates positively with tumor grading and the presence of lymph node as well as distant metastases and is specifically up-regulated in CMS4 tumors. Therefore, we suggest NOTCH3 as a putative target for advanced CMS4 CRC patients.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis